wall-flower
Appearance
See also: wallflower and wall flower
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]wall-flower (plural wall-flowers)
- Alternative form of wallflower
- 1809, William Nicholson, “BOTANY”, in The British Encyclopedia, or Dictionary of Arts and Sciences; […], volume I (A … B), London: Printed by C[harles] Whittingham, […]; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, […], →OCLC, column 1:
- A polypetalous corolla is either cruciform, as in a wall-flower, rosaceous, papilionaceous, as in the pea kind, or incomplete, when some parts found in analogous flowers are wanting.
- 1829, Alaric Alexander Watts, The Poetical Album: And Register of Modern Fugitive Poetry:
- The wall-flower—the wall-flower! How beautiful it blooms' It gleams above the ruined tower, Like sunlight over tombs;
- 1835, Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna, The Christian Lady’s magazine, page 2:
- The upper part of the wall was more gaudily attired, in all the variations of green moss, yellow and blue creepers, and the dark red of the wall-flower.