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The word 'daisy' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use 'daisy' as a noun to refer to a flower with white petals and a yellow center. For example, "The garden was filled with beautiful daisies."
Dictionary
daisy
noun
A wild flowering plant Bellis perennis of the Asteraceae family, with a yellow head and white petals
Exact(51)
"Women in mini skirts and daisy dukes are the norm in society through the eyes of men, but a man wearing shorts shocks men".
Around this mere handful of works by its hero – which do at least include his sumptuous The Garden of Love (c 1635) and his vulnerable, shivering nude the Venus Frigida (1614) – the curators have strung together a fragile daisy chain of prints, copies and daubs of dubious relevance, and sometimes very poor quality.
According to Sara Mednick and her colleagues at Harvard, just 60 minutes of shut-eye in the middle of the day can make you perform like the fresh daisy you were first thing in the morning.
Why should I go out and kill someone I never knew?"The war poets, too, painted this world, of girls making daisy chains and men with horse-teams ploughing, the tranquil river meadows and the deep-leafed woods.
See also chamomile; daisy.
Many words were originally vivid images, although they exist now as dead metaphors whose original aptness has been lost for example, "daisy" (day's eye).
Similar(9)
Yet what has been even more fascinating to watch is the daisy-chain of hires that have occurred as a knock-on effect.
By daisy-chaining USB hubs together, up to 127 peripherals could be attached to a single USB port.
Now people are making trips in a "daisy-chain" pattern, he says.
If a particular site needs more power, several fuel cells could be daisy-chained into a mini-grid system.
There are merely 71 remaining specimens of Scalesia affinis, a small tree with white, daisy-like flowers, on Santa Cruz island.
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