Found 2 items, similar to Trifolium repens.
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: Trifolium repens
Trifolium repens
n : creeping European clover having white to pink flowers and
bright green leaves; naturalized in United States; widely
grown for forage [syn:
white clover,
dutch clover,
shamrock]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Trifolium repens
Shamrock
\Sham"rock\, n. [L. seamrog, seamar, trefoil, white
clover, white honeysuckle; akin to Gael. seamrag.] (Bot.)
A trifoliate plant used as a national emblem by the Irish.
The legend is that St. Patrick once plucked a leaf of it for
use in illustrating the doctrine of the trinity.
[1913 Webster]
Note: The original plant was probably a kind of wood sorrel
(
Oxalis Acetocella); but now the name is given to the
white clover (
Trifolium repens), and the black medic
(
Medicago lupulina).
[1913 Webster]
Dutch
\Dutch\, a. [D. duitsch German; or G. deutsch, orig.,
popular, national, OD. dietsc, MHG. diutsch, tiutsch, OHG.
diutisk, fr. diot, diota, a people, a nation; akin to AS.
pe['o]d, OS. thiod, thioda, Goth. piuda; cf. Lith. tauta
land, OIr. tuath people, Oscan touto. The English have
applied the name especially to the Germanic people living
nearest them, the Hollanders. Cf.
Derrick,
Teutonic.]
Pertaining to Holland, or to its inhabitants.
[1913 Webster]
Dutch auction. See under
Auction.
Dutch cheese, a small, pound, hard cheese, made from skim
milk.
Dutch clinker, a kind of brick made in Holland. It is
yellowish, very hard, and long and narrow in shape.
Dutch clover (Bot.), common white clover (
Trifolium repens
), the seed of which was largely imported into
England from Holland.
Dutch concert, a so-called concert in which all the singers
sing at the same time different songs. [Slang]
Dutch courage, the courage of partial intoxication. [Slang]
--Marryat.
Dutch door, a door divided into two parts, horizontally, so
arranged that the lower part can be shut and fastened,
while the upper part remains open.
Dutch foil,
Dutch leaf, or
Dutch gold, a kind of brass
rich in copper, rolled or beaten into thin sheets, used in
Holland to ornament toys and paper; -- called also
Dutch mineral
,
Dutch metal,
brass foil, and
bronze leaf.
Dutch liquid (Chem.), a thin, colorless, volatile liquid,
C2H4Cl2, of a sweetish taste and a pleasant ethereal
odor, produced by the union of chlorine and ethylene or
olefiant gas; -- called also
Dutch oil. It is so called
because discovered (in 1795) by an association of four
Hollandish chemists. See
Ethylene, and
Olefiant.
Dutch oven, a tin screen for baking before an open fire or
kitchen range; also, in the United States, a shallow iron
kettle for baking, with a cover to hold burning coals.
Dutch pink, chalk, or whiting dyed yellow, and used in
distemper, and for paper staining. etc. --Weale.
Dutch rush (Bot.), a species of horsetail rush or
Equisetum (
Equisetum hyemale) having a rough,
siliceous surface, and used for scouring and polishing; --
called also
scouring rush, and
shave grass. See
Equisetum.
Dutch tile, a glazed and painted ornamental tile, formerly
much exported, and used in the jambs of chimneys and the
like.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Dutch was formerly used for German.
[1913 Webster]
Germany is slandered to have sent none to this
war [the Crusades] at this first voyage; and that
other pilgrims, passing through that country,
were mocked by the Dutch, and called fools for
their pains. --Fuller.
[1913 Webster]
Clover
\Clo"ver\ (kl[=o]"v[~e]r), n. [OE. claver, clover, AS.
cl[=ae]fre; akin to LG. & Dan. klever, D. klaver, G. klee,
Sw. kl["o]fver.] (Bot.)
A plant of different species of the genus
Trifolium; as the
common red clover,
Trifolium pratense, the white,
Trifolium repens, and the hare's foot,
Trifolium arvense.
[1913 Webster]
Clover weevil (Zo["o]l.) a small weevil (
Apion apricans),
that destroys the seeds of clover.
Clover worm (Zo["o]l.), the larva of a small moth (
Asopia costalis
), often very destructive to clover hay.
In clover, in very pleasant circumstances; fortunate.
[Colloq.]
Sweet clover. See
Meliot.
[1913 Webster]