Reseda Odorata meaning in Urdu
Reseda Odorata Synonyms
Reseda Odorata Definitions
1) Reseda Odorata, Mignonette, Sweet Reseda : ایک قسم کا پودا : (noun) Mediterranean woody annual widely cultivated for its dense terminal spikelike clusters greenish or yellowish white flowers having an intense spicy fragrance.
Useful Words
Agave Americana : امریکی بغیر تنے والا پودا , Acanthus : اکنتھس پودا , Common Hyacinth : سنبل کے پھول , Ananas : انناس , Calendula : گیندا , Indian Lotus : کنول کا پھول , Paeony : ایک قسم کا پہول دار پودا , Berteroa Incana : سفید پھول والا پودا , Bachelor's Button : نیلے ، سفید ، گلابی پھولوں والا ایک پودا , Capparis Spinosa : بحر روم کی خاردار جڑی بوٹی , Confederate Rose : رنگ بدلنے والے پھول , Common Fig : انجیر کا درخت , Hibiscus Syriacus : نرگسی گلاب , Pear : ناشپاتی کا درخت , Rhus Typhina : مشرقی شمالی امریکا میں پایا جانے والا درخت جس کے پتے خزاں میں لال ہوجاتے ہیں , Common Vetchling : جنگلی پیلا مٹر , Common Devil's Claw : شیطانی پنجہ ، ایک امریکی پھول دار پودا , Cajan Pea : ارہر کی دال , Hibiscus Sabdariffa : کھٹی جڑی بوٹی , Potato : آلو , German Chamomile : ایک قسم کی جری بوٹی جس سے دوا وغیرہ بھی بنائی جاتی ہے , Rye : رائی کا پودا , Brassica Rapa : شلغم , Sea Onion : بحری پیاز , Abele : سفیدے کا درخت , Abelmoschus Esculentus : بھنڈی کا پودا , Common Morning Glory : نیلوفرکا پودا , Lavender : اسطخودوس , Acanthus Mollis : یورپی اکنتھس , Hedge Mustard : زرد پھول والا امریکی پودا , Heart Cherry : میٹھی چیری
Useful Words Definitions
Agave Americana: widely cultivated American monocarpic plant with greenish-white flowers on a tall stalk; blooms only after ten to twenty years and then dies.
Acanthus: any plant of the genus Acanthus having large spiny leaves and spikes or white or purplish flowers; native to Mediterranean region but widely cultivated.
Common Hyacinth: widely grown for its fragrance and its white, pink, blue, or purplish flowers.
Ananas: large sweet fleshy tropical fruit with a terminal tuft of stiff leaves; widely cultivated.
Calendula: any of numerous chiefly annual herbs of the genus Calendula widely cultivated for their yellow or orange flowers; often used for medicinal and culinary purposes.
Indian Lotus: native to eastern Asia; widely cultivated for its large pink or white flowers.
Paeony: any of numerous plants widely cultivated for their showy single or double red or pink or white flowers.
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.
Bachelor's Button: an annual Eurasian plant cultivated in North America having showy heads of blue or purple or pink or white flowers.
Capparis Spinosa: prostrate spiny shrub of the Mediterranean region cultivated for its greenish flower buds which are pickled.
Confederate Rose: Chinese shrub or small tree having white or pink flowers becoming deep red at night; widely cultivated; naturalized in southeastern United States.
Common Fig: Mediterranean tree widely cultivated for its edible fruit.
Hibiscus Syriacus: Asiatic shrub or small shrubby tree having showy bell-shaped rose or purple or white flowers and usually three-lobed leaves; widely cultivated in temperate North America and Europe.
Pear: Old World tree having sweet gritty-textured juicy fruit; widely cultivated in many varieties.
Rhus Typhina: deciduous shrubby tree or eastern North America with compound leaves that turn brilliant red in fall and dense panicles of greenish yellow flowers followed by crimson acidic berries.
Common Vetchling: scrambling perennial Eurasian wild pea having yellowish flowers and compressed seed pods; cultivated for forage.
Common Devil's Claw: annual of southern United States to Mexico having large whitish or yellowish flowers mottled with purple and a long curving beak.
Cajan Pea: tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics.
Hibiscus Sabdariffa: East Indian sparsely prickly annual herb or perennial subshrub widely cultivated for its fleshy calyxes used in tarts and jelly and for its bast fiber.
Potato: annual native to South America having underground stolons bearing edible starchy tubers; widely cultivated as a garden vegetable; vines are poisonous.
German Chamomile: annual Eurasian herb similar in fragrance and medicinal uses to chamomile though taste is more bitter and effect is considered inferior.
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.
Brassica Rapa: widely cultivated plant having a large fleshy edible white or yellow root.
Sea Onion: having dense spikes of small white flowers and yielding a bulb with medicinal properties.
Abele: a poplar that is widely cultivated in the United States; has white bark and leaves with whitish undersurfaces.
Abelmoschus Esculentus: tall coarse annual of Old World tropics widely cultivated in southern United States and West Indies for its long mucilaginous green pods used as basis for soups and stews; sometimes placed in genus Hibiscus.
Common Morning Glory: annual or perennial climbing herb of Central America having sky-blue flowers; most commonly cultivated morning glory.
Lavender: any of various Old World aromatic shrubs or subshrubs with usually mauve or blue flowers; widely cultivated.
Acanthus Mollis: widely cultivated southern European acanthus with whitish purple-veined flowers.
Hedge Mustard: stiffly branching Old World annual with pale yellow flowers; widely naturalized in North America; formerly used medicinally.
Heart Cherry: any of several cultivated sweet cherries having sweet juicy heart-shaped fruits.