centaurea
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the genus name, Centaurea, from Latin centaurēa. Doublet of centaury.
Noun
[edit]centaurea (plural centaureas)
- Any of the plants in the genus Centaurea.
- 1850, Harper's Magazine, volume 1, page 449:
- The marjorum stood in ruddy and fragrant masses; harebells and campanulas of several kinds, that are cultivated in our gardens, with bells large and clear; crimson pinks; the Michaelmas daisy; a plant with a thin, radiated yellow flower, of the character of an aster; a centaurea of a light purple, handsomer than any English one; a thistle in the dryest places, resembling an eryngo, with a thick, bushy top; mulleins, yellow and white; the wild mignonnette, and the white convolvulus; and clematis festooning the bushes, recalled the flowery fields and lanes of England, and yet told us that we were not there.
- 1873, Michigan State Pomological Society, Annual Report of the Michigan State Pomological Society, volume 2, page 131:
- Its border is of tri-colored and quadricolored geranium leaves, intermingled with leaves of the highly tinted coleus and the hoary centaurea.
- 1953, The Visual Garden Manual, page 48:
- Two of the best-known annual centaureas are C. cyanus (cornflower or Bachelor’s button) and C. moschata (Sweet Sultan).
- 1975, Ippolito Pizzetti, Henry Cocker, Flowers: a Guide for Your Garden, volume 1, page 205:
- The ancient Greeks believed that when Chiron was wounded in the foot by an arrow that Hercules had poisoned with the blood of the Hydra he cured himself by treating the wound with the sap of a centaurea. However, in actual fact, none of the centaureas, like the majority of the family Compositae in general, possess any great medicinal properties.
- 2000, Shane Smith, Greenhouse Gardener's Companion: Growing Food and Flowers in Your Greenhouse Or Sunspace, →ISBN, page 194:
- Another type of centaurea, which has an interesting flower with sharp pointed tips, is Centaurea moschata. It is also fragrant and will need staking like the other centaureas but usually doesn’t bloom quite as prolifically.
References
[edit]- “centaurea”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
Italian
[edit]Noun
[edit]centaurea f (plural centauree)
Latin
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Accessory form of centaurēum in the Herbarium of Pseudo-Apuleius, from Ancient Greek κενταύρειον (kentaúreion, “several plants related to Centaurea”), from κένταυρος (kéntauros, “centaur”) (due to the mythological discovery of its medicinal properties by Chiron the Centaur).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ken.tau̯ˈreː.a/, [kɛn̪t̪äu̯ˈreːä]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /t͡ʃen.tau̯ˈre.a/, [t͡ʃen̪t̪äu̯ˈrɛːä]
Noun
[edit]centaurēa f (genitive centaurēae); first declension
- (Medieval Latin) Alternative form of centaurēum
Declension
[edit]First-declension noun.
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | centaurēa | centaurēae |
genitive | centaurēae | centaurēārum |
dative | centaurēae | centaurēīs |
accusative | centaurēam | centaurēās |
ablative | centaurēā | centaurēīs |
vocative | centaurēa | centaurēae |
Descendants
[edit]- → Arabic: جِنْتَوْرِيَّة (jintawriyya)
- → Dutch: centaurie
- → Old English: centaurie
- → Catalan: centaura
- → Czech: čantoryja, čantoryjka, cintorie
- → French: centaurée
- → Ido: centaureo
- → Italian: centaurea
- → Norman: centaurée
- → Occitan: centaurèa
- → Portuguese: centáurea
- → Romanian: cintáură, cintorie, cintoare, țintaură
- → Spanish: centaura
- → Translingual: Centaurea
- → English: centaurea
References
[edit]- “centaurēa”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
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