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wildflower

/wahyld-flou-er/US // ˈwaɪldˌflaʊ ər //

野花,野生花,野生花卉,野花的

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the flower of a plant that normally grows in fields, forests, etc., without deliberate cultivation.
    • : the plant itself.

Examples

  • To solve the puzzle, Graham and colleagues needed to know if the wildflower pulls nutrients from insect corpses.

  • The fact that picking these wildflowers stuck with her, I thought, was just representative of who she was.

  • The preserve doesn’t have camping, but hike any of its 40 miles of trails for a solitary experience of birdsong, wildflowers, and bison.

  • East Humboldt Wilderness has a 32,364-acre buffet of mountain vegetation, from grasses and wildflowers to pines and aspens—all splashed across the rocky slopes of the East Humboldt Range.

  • The name translates as wildflowers, which are etched on the elegant, traditionally shaped rosé bottle.

  • “I always want to be a sort of bad-ass, and I always come out smelling like a wildflower,” she told me.

  • He picks a wildflower nudging its face through calloused stone and watches the juice break onto forward skin.

  • And he also loved to look at Sun Cloud, who possessed all of that rare wildflower beauty sometimes given to the northern Crees.

  • Here is more "May-flower" or marsh marigold; let us take some; it will make a bright show in our wildflower cluster.

  • "If you know anything simpler than a wildflower, I'd like to be shown it," retorted Blue Bonnet.

  • Suddenly this lovely wildflower of the mountains disappeared.