Aegilops Triuncalis meaning in Urdu
Aegilops Triuncalis Synonym
Aegilops Triuncalis Definitions
1) Aegilops Triuncalis, Goat Grass : یورپی دو سری گھاس : (noun) European grass naturalized as a weed in North America; sharp-pointed seeds cause injury when eaten by livestock.
Useful Words
Agropyron Repens : یورپی گھاس , Aethusa Cynapium : دھنیا جیسی چرس , Boneset : گلابی یا اودے پھولوں والی بوٹی , Hieracium Aurantiacum : نارنجی پھول والا پودا , Eleusine Indica : صحنی گھاس , Barley Grass : یورپی گھاس , Berteroa Incana : سفید پھول والا پودا , Holcus Lanatus : یورپی لمبی گھاس , Grama : ایک قسم کی گھاس , Aegilops : دو سری گھاس , Agrostis Alba : یورپی گھاس , Agrostemma Githago : گل چنگ , Common Dandelion : ککروندے کا پودا , Black-Eyed Susan : گھنٹے بھر کا پھول , Grazing Land : سبزہ زار , Artemisia Abrotanum : ایک پودا جس کانٹا چوبیں ہوتا ھے , Horsebean : موٹی سیم کا پیڑ , Turf : گھاس سے ڈھکی ہوئی زمین , Heal All : نیلے پھول والا یورپی پودا , Black Medick : یورپی جڑی بوٹی , Greensward : کارپیٹ گھاس , Rye : رائی کا پودا , Broad-Leaved Plantain : چرس کی ایک قسم , Creeping Soft Grass : نرم گھاس , Bearded Darnel : جنگلی گھاس , Blue Devil : نیلے پھولوں والی یورپی گھاس پھوس یا پودا , Aleppo Grass : ایک لمبی گھاس , Boys-And-Girls : قبض کش بوٹی , Billion-Dollar Grass : باجرے کا پودا , Common Lilac : گل یاس , Corn : مکئی
Useful Words Definitions
Agropyron Repens: European grass spreading rapidly by creeping rhizomes; naturalized in North America as a weed.
Aethusa Cynapium: European weed naturalized in America that resembles parsley but causes nausea and poisoning when eaten.
Boneset: European herb having small white, pink or purple flowers; naturalized as a weed in North America.
Hieracium Aurantiacum: European hawkweed having flower heads with bright orange-red rays; a troublesome weed especially as naturalized in northeastern North America; sometimes placed in genus Hieracium.
Eleusine Indica: coarse annual grass having fingerlike spikes of flowers; native to Old World tropics; a naturalized weed elsewhere.
Barley Grass: European annual grass often found as a weed in waste ground especially along roadsides and hedgerows.
Berteroa Incana: tall European annual with downy grey-green foliage and dense heads of small white flowers followed by hairy pods; naturalized in North America; sometimes a troublesome weed.
Holcus Lanatus: tall European perennial grass having a velvety stem; naturalized in United States and used for forage.
Grama: pasture grass of plains of South America and western North America.
Aegilops: goat grass.
Agrostis Alba: slender European grass of shady places; grown also in northeastern America and temperate Asia.
Agrostemma Githago: European annual having large trumpet-shaped reddish-purple flowers and poisonous seed; a common weed in grainfields and beside roadways; naturalized in America.
Common Dandelion: Eurasian plant widely naturalized as a weed in North America; used as salad greens and to make wine.
Black-Eyed Susan: annual weedy herb with ephemeral yellow purple-eyed flowers; Old World tropics; naturalized as a weed in North America.
Grazing Land: a field covered with grass or herbage and suitable for grazing by livestock.
Artemisia Abrotanum: shrubby European wormwood naturalized in North America; sometimes used in brewing beer.
Horsebean: large shrub or shrubby tree having sharp spines and pinnate leaves with small deciduous leaflets and sweet-scented racemose yellow-orange flowers; grown as ornamentals or hedging or emergency food for livestock; tropical America but naturalized in southern United States.
Turf: cover (the ground) with a surface layer of grass or grass roots.
Heal All: decumbent blue-flowered European perennial thought to possess healing properties; naturalized throughout North America.
Black Medick: prostrate European herb with small yellow flowers and curved black pods; naturalized in North America.
Greensward: surface layer of ground containing a mat of grass and grass roots.
Rye: hardy annual cereal grass widely cultivated in northern Europe where its grain is the chief ingredient of black bread and in North America for forage and soil improvement.
Broad-Leaved Plantain: common European perennial naturalized worldwide; a troublesome weed.
Creeping Soft Grass: European perennial grass with soft velvety foliage.
Bearded Darnel: weedy annual grass often occurs in grainfields and other cultivated land; seeds sometimes considered poisonous.
Blue Devil: a coarse prickly European weed with spikes of blue flowers; naturalized in United States.
Aleppo Grass: tall perennial grass that spreads by creeping rhizomes and is grown for fodder; naturalized in southern United States where it is a serious pest on cultivated land.
Boys-And-Girls: Eurafrican annual naturalized in America as a weed; formerly dried for use as a purgative, diuretic or antisyphilitic.
Billion-Dollar Grass: coarse annual grass cultivated in Japan and southeastern Asia for its edible seeds and for forage; important wildlife food in United States.
Common Lilac: large European lilac naturalized in North America having heart-shaped ovate leaves and large panicles of highly fragrant lilac or white flowers.
Corn: tall annual cereal grass bearing kernels on large ears: widely cultivated in America in many varieties; the principal cereal in Mexico and Central and South America since pre-Columbian times.