Definitions Found:
any of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teaseledany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teaselerany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazlesany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazeledany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazelany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazlingany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teaselany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazledany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazleany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teazelsany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- teaselsany of several plants of the genus Dipsacus, having prickly leaves and flower heads
- ageratumany of several composite plants of the genus Ageratum, esp. A. houstonianum, having heart-shaped leaves and small, dense, blue, lavender, or white flower heads, often grown in gardens
- mugwortany of certain weedy composite plants of the genus Artemisia, esp. A. vulgaris, having aromatic leaves and small, greenish flower heads
- daturaany of several plants belonging to the genus Datura, of the nightshade family, including some species grown as ornamentals and usually having funnel-shaped flowers and prickly pods: the leaves and seeds are the source of hallucinogenic alkaloids
- daturasany of several plants belonging to the genus Datura, of the nightshade family, including some species grown as ornamentals and usually having funnel-shaped flowers and prickly pods: the leaves and seeds are the source of hallucinogenic alkaloids
- daturicany of several plants belonging to the genus Datura, of the nightshade family, including some species grown as ornamentals and usually having funnel-shaped flowers and prickly pods: the leaves and seeds are the source of hallucinogenic alkaloids
- tarweedany of several resinous or gummy, composite plants of the genus Grindelia, having solitary flower heads
- boltoniaany of several composite plants of the genus Boltonia, of the U.S., having blue, purple, or white asterlike flower heads
- trilliumany of several plants belonging to the genus Trillium, of the lily family, having a whorl of three leaves from the center of which rises a solitary, three-petalled flower
- gumweedany of various New World composite plants of the genus Grindelia, having yellow flower heads and covered with a viscid secretion
- burnetany of several plants belonging to the genera Sanguisorba and Poterium, of the rose family, having pinnate leaves and dense heads of small flowers