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pot-herb
pot-herb (ˈpɒthɜːb) [f. pot n.1 + herb.] A herb grown for boiling in the pot; any of the herbs cultivated in a kitchen-garden. black pot-herb, white pot-herb, old names for Alexanders (Smyrnium Olusatrum) and Corn-salad (Valerianella olitoria) respectively. (Gerarde 1597, 243.)1538 Elyot, Caulis... ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pot-herb
pot-herbn any plant whose leaves, stems or roots are used in cooking to add flavour, esp to soups and stews (调味用的)植物性香料.
牛津英汉双解词典
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Mertensia paniculata
Usage
Food and medicine
While the tall bluebell's organs are not edible whole, it has been used in the past as a pot-herb in the north and in areas of
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Atriplex cinerea
Joseph Maiden's 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that it was "once used as pot-herb in New South Wales.
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oleraceous
oleraceous, a. (ɒləˈreɪʃəs) [f. L. (h)olerāce-us (f. (h)olus, (h)oler- pot-herb) + -ous.] Of the nature of a pot-herb, or vegetable used in cookery; obtained from a pot-herb.a 1682 Sir T. Browne Tracts 28 An herby and oleraceous vegetable. 1822–34 Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 487 The oleraceous and ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Chenopodiastrum murale
It also states that it is a "pot-herb", which may be utilised in the same manner as spinach. It is called oñk i:waki in Oʼodham, 'salt greens'.
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ambari
ambari (æmˈbɑːrɪ) Also -ee. [Urdu ambārā, ambāṛī.] The fibre of an Indian plant, Hibiscus cannabinus, used for making ropes and coarse cloth; brown Indian hemp (also ambari hemp); the plant itself.1855 in Imp. Dict. Suppl. 1873 H. Drury Useful Plants of India (ed. 2) 243 Hibiscus cannabinus..Ambaree...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Tulu Gowda
(gold), Nandara, Malāra (a bundle of glass bangles, as carried about for sale), Sālu, Hemmana (pride or conceit), Kabru, Gōli (Portulaca oleracea, a pot-herb
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oca
‖ oca (ˈəʊkə) Also 9 occa. Also oka. [Sp. oca, a. Peruvian occa: cf. Gon{cced}alez Vocab. 1608, 262 ‘Occa, cierta rayz llamada assi’.] A name of two South American species of Oxalis, O. crenata and O. tuberosa, cultivated for their tubers, which resemble potatoes; the former also for its acid leaf-s...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Dalibarda
As with its close relatives the Rubus, the young plants make a reasonably palatable pot-herb, and can be brewed as a mild infusion/tea throughout the growing
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olitory
olitory, a. and n. Now rare. (ˈɒlɪtərɪ) [ad. L. (h)olitōrius of or belonging to a kitchen gardener or vegetables, f. (h)olitor kitchen gardener, f. holus, holer-, pot-herbs, vegetables: see -ory.] A. adj. Of or pertaining to pot-herbs or kitchen vegetables, or to the kitchen garden.1658 Evelyn Diary...
Oxford English Dictionary
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joute
† joute, jowte Obs. Also 5 iouute, eowte, iute. [In form identical with OF. joute (jote, jute) vegetable, pot-herb (L. olus), later esp. beet; in med.L. juta (cf. jutta in Du Cange).] In pl., Pot-herbs; usually, soup or pottage made chiefly of vegetables. (Cf. Sc. kale.)1377 Langl. P. Pl. B. v. 158,...
Oxford English Dictionary
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chervil
chervil (ˈtʃɜːvɪl) Forms: 1 cærfille, cerfelle, cerfille, 3 chareuille, 4 chiruylle, 4–6 cheruell(e, 5 cherefelle, 6 cheruyle, -uel, -uyll, charuiel, -uel, -vyle, 6–7 chervill, chervile, 7 cherfill, 6– chervil. [OE. cærfille, cerfille, -felle, ad. L. chær(e)phylla pl. of chærephyllum, a. Gr. χαιρέϕυ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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salading
salading (ˈsælədɪŋ) Forms: see salad; also 7 salletine, 8 salatine. [f. salad + -ing1.] Herbs and vegetables used for salad.1664 Evelyn Kal. Hort. (1729) 190 Sow Chervil, Lettuce, Radish, and other..Salletings. Ibid. 216 Fill your vacant Beds with Sallading. 1670 Narborough in Acc. Sev. Late Voy. i....
Oxford English Dictionary
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masterwort
masterwort (ˈmɑːstəwɜːt) [f. master n.1 + wort n., after G. meisterwurz; the same sense is expressed by the 16th c. L. name imperātōria, but the reason for the appellation is not clear.] a. The umbelliferous plant Peucedanum (Imperatoria) Ostruthium, formerly cultivated as a pot-herb, and used in me...
Oxford English Dictionary
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