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Dogtooth   Listen
Dogtooth

noun
(pl. dogteeth)
1.
Perennial woodland spring-flowering plant; widely cultivated.  Synonyms: dog's-tooth violet, dogtooth violet.
2.
One of the four pointed conical teeth (two in each jaw) located between the incisors and the premolars.  Synonyms: canine, canine tooth, cuspid, eye tooth, eyetooth.
3.
A carved pyramidal ornament; used in 13th century England.



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"Dogtooth" Quotes from Famous Books



... this bit of river awakened her interest; Blackbird Island was clearly described: Buffalo Island harked back many years into tradition; Dogtooth Island was a matter of river shape; but Saladin, Tow Head and Orient Field stirred her imagination, for they might reveal the scene of steamboat disasters or some surveyor's memory of the Arabian Nights. ...
— The River Prophet • Raymond S. Spears

... most exquisitely fragrant. But the New Englander, when he talks of wild flowers, has in his eye something different from these. He is not thinking of any bush, no matter how beautiful, but of trailing arbutus, hepaticas, bloodroot, anemones, saxifrage, violets, dogtooth violets, spring beauties, "cowslips," buttercups, corydalis, columbine, Dutchman's breeches, clintonia, five-finger, and all the rest of that bright and fragrant host which, ever since he can remember, he has seen covering his native hills and ...
— A Florida Sketch-Book • Bradford Torrey

... extremely simple, and were decorated with a "peculiar and shallow class of notched ornament", of which many examples exist in other buildings of the period; while the mouldings of William of Sens "exhibit much variety, but are most remarkable for the profusion of billet-work, zigzag and dogtooth, that are lavished upon them." The first two methods of ornamentation are Norman, the last an Early English characteristic. This mixture is not confined to the details of decoration but may be observed also in the indiscriminate employment of round and pointed arches. This feature, ...
— The Cathedral Church of Canterbury [2nd ed.]. • Hartley Withers

... usually arriving in March, while the rarer and more brilliant wood-birds bring up the procession in June. But each stage of the advancing season gives prominence to the certain species, as to certain flowers. The dandelion tells me when to look for the swallow, the dogtooth violet when to expect the wood-thrush, and when I have found the wake-robin in bloom I know the season is fairly inaugurated. With me this flower is associated, not merely with the awakening of Robin, for he has been awake for some weeks, but with the universal awakening ...
— Wake-Robin • John Burroughs



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