anthurium

See also: Anthurium

English

anthurium

Wikispecies

Etymology

From the genus name.

Noun

anthurium (plural anthuriums or anthuria)

  1. Any of several tropical American evergreen plants, of the genus Anthurium, grown for their ornamental leaves and spathes.
    • 1943, Alice Northrop Snow, The Story of Helen Gould, Daughter of Jay Gould, Great American, volume 1, New York, N.Y., London, Edinburgh: Fleming H. Revell Company, page 124:
      A huge vase of scarlet anthuria and poinsettias, arranged with ferns, stood in the center.
    • 2008, Randall Peffer, Southern Seahawk: A Novel of the Civil War at Sea, Bleak House Books, →ISBN, page 204:
      He can already smell the anthuria and imagine the confetti of butterfly wings on his cheeks.
    • 2019, Helen Marshall, The Migration, Titan Books, →ISBN:
      The first thing I see is a sympathy bouquet from the Dean of New College—white roses, anthuria and orchids in a crystal vase next to the sink.
    • 2022, Ayanna Lloyd Banwo, When We Were Birds, Hamish Hamilton, page 271:
      They gather the bouquets — pink gingers, yellow tiger lilies and white anthuriums they cut from the garden in the hills — and she follow him to a grave with a shiny new headstone.

Synonyms

Translations

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