French Honeysuckle meaning in Urdu
French Honeysuckle Synonyms
French Honeysuckle Definitions
1) French Honeysuckle, Hedysarum Coronarium, Sulla : رسیلا یورپی پودا : (noun) perennial of southern Europe cultivated for forage and for its nectar-rich pink flowers that make it an important honey crop.
Useful Words
Esparcet : گلابی پھول والا پودا , Glycine Max : سویابین , Himalaya Honeysuckle : اودے پھول والی جھاڑی , Common Vetchling : جنگلی پیلا مٹر , Common Broom : سرسوں جیسا پودا , Agropyron Pauciflorum : امریکی گھاس , Aster Novi-Belgii : ضیافت میکائیل کے دنوں میں کھلنے والے تارا پھولوں کی کوئی بھی قسم , Broomcorn Millet : باجرے کی قسم , Billion-Dollar Grass : باجرے کا پودا , Honey Plant : رسیلا پودا , Comte De Mirabeau : فرانسیسی انقلابی , Balzac : فرانسیسی ناول نگار , Comte De Rochambeau : فرانسیسی جرنیل , Rye : رائی کا پودا , Calamintha Sylvatica : پودینے کی خوشبو والا پھول دار پودا , Madame Tussaud : فرانسیسی نمونہ تیار کرنے والا , Indian Lotus : کنول کا پھول , African Violet : افریقی پھول دار پودہ , Paeony : ایک قسم کا پہول دار پودا , Aleppo Grass : ایک لمبی گھاس , Bachelor's Button : نیلے ، سفید ، گلابی پھولوں والا ایک پودا , Hoya Carnosa : موم کا پودا , Clinopodium Vulgare : ایک قسم کی بوٹی , Acanthus Mollis : یورپی اکنتھس , Hedysarum Boreale : پھلی دار امریکی پودا , Damask Violet : رات کی رانی کا پودا , Confederate Rose : رنگ بدلنے والے پھول , Black Knapweed : ایک پودا , Common Milkwort : مغزر شائعہ , Common Morning Glory : نیلوفرکا پودا , Fenugreek : میتھی
Useful Words Definitions
Esparcet: Eurasian perennial herb having pale pink flowers and curved pods; naturalized in Britain and North America grasslands on calcareous soils; important forage crop and source of honey in Britain.
Glycine Max: erect bushy hairy annual herb having trifoliate leaves and purple to pink flowers; extensively cultivated for food and forage and soil improvement but especially for its nutritious oil-rich seeds; native to Asia.
Himalaya Honeysuckle: shrub honeysuckle with drooping spikes of purplish flowers.
Common Vetchling: scrambling perennial Eurasian wild pea having yellowish flowers and compressed seed pods; cultivated for forage.
Common Broom: deciduous erect spreading broom native to western Europe; widely cultivated for its rich yellow flowers.
Agropyron Pauciflorum: North American grass cultivated in western United States as excellent forage crop.
Aster Novi-Belgii: North American perennial herb having small autumn-blooming purple or pink or white flowers; widely naturalized in Europe.
Broomcorn Millet: extensively cultivated in Europe and Asia for its grain and in United States sometimes for forage.
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.
Honey Plant: a plant that furnishes nectar suitable for making honey.
Comte De Mirabeau: French revolutionary who was prominent in the early days of the French Revolution (1749-1791).
Balzac: French novelist; he portrays the complexity of 19th century French society (1799-1850).
Comte De Rochambeau: French general who commanded French troops in the American Revolution, notably at Yorktown (1725-1807).
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.
Calamintha Sylvatica: mint-scented perennial of central and southern Europe.
Madame Tussaud: French modeler (resident in England after 1802) who made wax death masks of prominent victims of the French Revolution and toured Britain with her wax models; in 1835 she opened a permanent waxworks exhibition in London (1761-1850).
Indian Lotus: native to eastern Asia; widely cultivated for its large pink or white flowers.
African Violet: tropical African plant cultivated as a houseplant for its violet or white or pink flowers.
Paeony: any of numerous plants widely cultivated for their showy single or double red or pink or white flowers.
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.
Bachelor's Button: an annual Eurasian plant cultivated in North America having showy heads of blue or purple or pink or white flowers.
Hoya Carnosa: succulent climber of southern Asia with umbels of pink and white star-shaped flowers.
Clinopodium Vulgare: aromatic herb having heads of small pink or whitish flowers; widely distributed in United States, Europe and Asia.
Acanthus Mollis: widely cultivated southern European acanthus with whitish purple-veined flowers.
Hedysarum Boreale: perennial of western United States having racemes of pink to purple flowers followed by flat pods that separate into nearly orbicular joints.
Damask Violet: long cultivated herb having flowers whose scent is more pronounced in the evening; naturalized throughout Europe to Siberia and into North America.
Confederate Rose: Chinese shrub or small tree having white or pink flowers becoming deep red at night; widely cultivated; naturalized in southeastern United States.
Black Knapweed: a weedy perennial with tough wiry stems and purple flowers; native to Europe but widely naturalized.
Common Milkwort: small European perennial with numerous branches having racemes of blue, pink or white flowers; formerly reputed to promote human lactation.
Common Morning Glory: annual or perennial climbing herb of Central America having sky-blue flowers; most commonly cultivated morning glory.
Fenugreek: annual herb or southern Europe and eastern Asia having off-white flowers and aromatic seeds used medicinally and in curry.