cow lily
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]cow lily (countable and uncountable, plural cow lilies)
- A water lily of species Nuphar advena, of temperate eastern North America.
- Synonyms: yellow pond-lily, spatterdock
- 1878, Annie Trumbull Slosson, “More Daisy Farm Letters”, in The China Hunters Club, page 201:
- Bess amused herself the other day by making a large bouquet entirely of yellow flowers of different shades and varieties, and it looked like a city milliner's window in this present season of "tilleul," "old gold," and "saffron:" vivid coreopsis, with dark velvet centres; "butter-and-eggs," with spires of palest straw color and orange mingled; barberry blossoms in drooping sprays, buttercups with gold enamelled blossoms, "yellow daises,"[sic] a few late dandelions, the little "five-finger," and some yellow pond-lilies (they call them "cow-lilies" here).
- 1910, Chester Albert Reed, Wild Flowers East of the Rockies, page 117:
- The Cow Lily is very common in still or stagnant water, often growing so profusely that passage in boats is almost impossible.
- 1913, Clarence Moores Weed, Seeing Nature First, page 105:
- One seldom needs to stroll far along the shores of a pond or the sluggish inlet from a brook before finding the blossoms of the large yellow pond-lily, perhaps more often called the cow-lily.
Alternative forms
[edit]References
[edit]- Nuphar advena on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Nuphar advena on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Nuphar advena on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons