BOT. Hollyhock. Ornamental plant, the Malvaceae family, characterized by stems erect, tall two to three meters, which are staged in a long terminal raceme, flowers round in bright colors (pink, purple, yellow, white, etc..). Synon. * pink hollyhock, hobbies pink primrose. "Rows and rows of hollyhocks seemed to bar the entrance of a grid of red flowers, yellow, purple, white, whose clubs were drowning in nettles" (Zola Without Father Mouret, 1875, p. 1346). "The hollyhock, a native of East Mediterranean (...) is cultivated since the sixteenth century in the West" (L. Guyot, P. Gibassier, Names of flowers, 1960 p. 101). V. former pastor. Feuillet, goes ex-pink. of Encyclop. sc. Techn.
- P. Meton. Cut flower of this plant. The rose she holds is the hollyhock. Neapolitan saint with hands full of fire, Rose purple heart, flower of Saint Gudula (Nerval, Chimera, 1854, p. 702). In a vase, a sprig of blooming hollyhocks, a strange purple striped with yellow (Zola, Dr. Pascal, 1893, p. 8).
- P. metaphit. "Kiss! Hollyhock in garden hugs! (...) Hi! The man bent over your cut adorable gray Getting a happiness he knows exhaust" (Verlaine, Poetry Saturn., 1866 , p. 82). Good level
etymology, it clearly does not agree, she might get off tremere, trembling as she trembles at the slightest breath. But it seems-not-not-at-all linguists say!
Delivered. and Orth. [tʀemjε: ʀ]. Att. ds Ac. dep. 1835. Étymol. and Hist. 1581 Hollyhock roze (Françoys Rousset, Treatise on the Cesarean birth, p. 222 ds Roll. Flora t. 3, p. 83); 1800 subst. fem. hollyhock (Boiste, sv pink). Alter. Pink oustremer well meaning ca 1500 (J. Camus, Book of hours after. Roll., loc. cit.). Freq. abs. littér.: 35. Bbg. Nigra (C.). Note etimologiche e lexical. Z. rom. Philol. 1904, t. 28, p. 648. (Treasury)
- P. Meton. Cut flower of this plant. The rose she holds is the hollyhock. Neapolitan saint with hands full of fire, Rose purple heart, flower of Saint Gudula (Nerval, Chimera, 1854, p. 702). In a vase, a sprig of blooming hollyhocks, a strange purple striped with yellow (Zola, Dr. Pascal, 1893, p. 8).
- P. metaphit. "Kiss! Hollyhock in garden hugs! (...) Hi! The man bent over your cut adorable gray Getting a happiness he knows exhaust" (Verlaine, Poetry Saturn., 1866 , p. 82). Good level
etymology, it clearly does not agree, she might get off tremere, trembling as she trembles at the slightest breath. But it seems-not-not-at-all linguists say!
Delivered. and Orth. [tʀemjε: ʀ]. Att. ds Ac. dep. 1835. Étymol. and Hist. 1581 Hollyhock roze (Françoys Rousset, Treatise on the Cesarean birth, p. 222 ds Roll. Flora t. 3, p. 83); 1800 subst. fem. hollyhock (Boiste, sv pink). Alter. Pink oustremer well meaning ca 1500 (J. Camus, Book of hours after. Roll., loc. cit.). Freq. abs. littér.: 35. Bbg. Nigra (C.). Note etimologiche e lexical. Z. rom. Philol. 1904, t. 28, p. 648. (Treasury)
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