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Flower   /flˈaʊər/   Listen
Flower

noun
1.
A plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms.
2.
Reproductive organ of angiosperm plants especially one having showy or colorful parts.  Synonyms: bloom, blossom.
3.
The period of greatest prosperity or productivity.  Synonyms: bloom, blossom, efflorescence, flush, heyday, peak, prime.
verb
(past & past part. flowered; pres. part. flowering)
1.
Produce or yield flowers.  Synonyms: bloom, blossom.



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"Flower" Quotes from Famous Books



... not call for help, or push over one of these flower-pots and strike me on the head, or send some one down to drive me away? We stand and look into one another's eyes without moving; it lasts a minute. Thoughts dart between the window and the street, and not a word is spoken. She turns ...
— Hunger • Knut Hamsun

... poets, Gilbert and Andre Chenier, and of our English Chatterton. But, then, no one of these can be called "a dominant historical personage," and the known facts permit themselves to be, and are, "romanticised" effectively enough. So the flower is in each case plucked from the nettle. And there is another flower of more positive and less compensatory kind which blooms here, which is particularly welcome to some readers, and which, from Cinq-Mars alone, they could ...
— A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 - To the Close of the 19th Century • George Saintsbury

... true, lived plainly enough, but there was no want of anything in the modest country house with the gay little flower garden. Nor did the boy lack playmates, though they were only the children of the farmers and townspeople of Leganes. Clad but little better than they, he shared their merry, often rough games. Geronimo called the violinist and his wife ...
— Uarda • Georg Ebers

... need to waste your pity on me, Sir Dreamer, for I need it not," retorted Dick. "Doubtless you take joy of your fancies; but realities are good enough for me, at least such realities as these. Look at that bird hovering over yonder flower, for instance; smaller, much smaller, than a wren is he, yet how perfectly shaped and how gloriously plumaged. Look to the colour of him, as rich a purple as that of your sunset cloud, with crest and throat like gold painted green. And then, the long curved beak of him, see how daintily he dips ...
— Two Gallant Sons of Devon - A Tale of the Days of Queen Bess • Harry Collingwood

... the tall stranger smiled down upon her and said, 'Violets are my favorite flower, and you ...
— From Jest to Earnest • E. P. Roe


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