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sweet flag
noun
A perennial wetland plant, Acorus calamus, with an aromatic medicinal root, formerly used to strew floors, also known as calamus
Exact(15)
Sweet flag has been used as an herbal ingredient at least since the Classical Greek era.
Acorus calamus (sweet flag) occurs in the wetlands of North America and from India to Indonesia.
Acorales, the sweet flag order of flowering plants and the most basal lineage among the monocotyledons (monocots), which are characterized by having a single seed leaf.
Three honey locusts are to be planted at the north end of the plaza, near a "rain garden" of sedges, ferns, sweet flag and iris in which runoff water will be captured for reuse.
By Leslie Nelson Jennings The New Yorker, September 22, 1934 P. 70 Hyssop and fennel and sweet flag - Can such things constitute a View Article By Phil Klay By Troy Patterson By John Cassidy By Amy Davidson Sorkin.
By Leslie Nelson Jennings The New Yorker, September 22, 1934 P. 70 Hyssop and fennel and sweet flag - Can such things constitute a View Article By Rivka Galchen By Larissa MacFarquhar By Ceridwen Dovey By Jia Tolentino.
Similar(43)
Chorus is optimized for transcribing calls, much like VoiceOps, but its sweet spot is flagging action items and sharing best practices.
There was another red flag against Sweet Wake.
Employees participated with sweet costumes and large flags.
On the sidelines, a Red Crescent medical van gave out bundles of Christmas sweets and free Palestinian flag face paint to children as Catholic nuns and women wearing the Hijab posed for photo album snapshots next to the square's nativity scene.
My sweet, sweet, sweetness.
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