صحَنی گھاس : Shani Ghas Meaning in English
Shani Ghas in Detail
1) صحنی گھاس : Eleusine Indica Goose Grass Wire Grass Yard Grass Yardgrass : (noun) coarse annual grass having fingerlike spikes of flowers; native to Old World tropics; a naturalized weed elsewhere.
Useful Words
گھنٹے بھر کا پھول : Black-Eyed Susan , نیلے پھولوں والی یورپی گھاس پھوس یا پودا : Blue Devil , چولائی جیسا پودا : Ambrosia Artemisiifolia , بھنڈی کا پودا : Abelmoschus Esculentus , گل چنگ : Agrostemma Githago , عام دھتورا : Apple Of Peru , سفید پھول والا پودا : Berteroa Incana , زرد پھول والا امریکی پودا : Hedge Mustard , یورپی گھاس : Agropyron Repens , عام گوکھرو : Common Teasel , قبض کش بوٹی : Boys-And-Girls , یورپی گھاس : Barley Grass , یورپی دو سری گھاس : Aegilops Triuncalis , باجرے کا پودا : Billion-Dollar Grass , لال یا پیلا گیندے جیسے پھولوں والا پودا : Celosia Argentea Cristata , گلابی یا اودے پھولوں والی بوٹی : Boneset , باجرہ : Millet , گل شام : Common Evening Primrose , ازخود اگنے والا سفید پھولوں والا پودا : Common Chickweed , یورپی پھول والا پودا : Draba Verna , کانٹے دار پودا : Ball Nettle , پیلے پھولوں والی امریکی جھاڑی : Amsinckia Intermedia , میٹھی تلسی کا پودا : Common Basil , ایک پودا : Black Knapweed , اکنتھس پودا : Acanthus , چائنا جوٹ جڑی بوٹی : Abutilon Theophrasti , برتوارٹ پودا جس کے پھول مڑے ہوتے ہیں : Aristolochia Clematitis , گل اشرفی : Common Buttercup , گوکھرو : Cockle-Bur , چرس کی ایک قسم : Broad-Leaved Plantain , سویابین : Glycine Max
Useful Words Definitions
Black-Eyed Susan: annual weedy herb with ephemeral yellow purple-eyed flowers; Old World tropics; naturalized as a weed in North America.
Blue Devil: a coarse prickly European weed with spikes of blue flowers; naturalized in United States.
Ambrosia Artemisiifolia: annual weed with finely divided foliage and spikes of green flowers; common in North America; introduced elsewhere accidentally.
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.
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.
Apple Of Peru: intensely poisonous tall coarse annual tropical weed having rank-smelling foliage, large white or violet trumpet-shaped flowers and prickly fruits.
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.
Hedge Mustard: stiffly branching Old World annual with pale yellow flowers; widely naturalized in North America; formerly used medicinally.
Agropyron Repens: European grass spreading rapidly by creeping rhizomes; naturalized in North America as a weed.
Common Teasel: teasel with lilac flowers native to Old World but naturalized in North America; dried flower heads used to raise a nap on woolen cloth.
Boys-And-Girls: Eurafrican annual naturalized in America as a weed; formerly dried for use as a purgative, diuretic or antisyphilitic.
Barley Grass: European annual grass often found as a weed in waste ground especially along roadsides and hedgerows.
Aegilops Triuncalis: European grass naturalized as a weed in North America; sharp-pointed seeds cause injury when eaten by livestock.
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.
Celosia Argentea Cristata: garden annual with featherlike spikes of red or yellow flowers.
Boneset: European herb having small white, pink or purple flowers; naturalized as a weed in North America.
Millet: any of various small-grained annual cereal and forage grasses of the genera Panicum, Echinochloa, Setaria, Sorghum, and Eleusine.
Common Evening Primrose: a coarse biennial of eastern North America with yellow flowers that open in the evening; naturalized in Europe.
Common Chickweed: a common low-growing annual garden weed with small white flowers; cosmopolitan; so-called because it is eaten by chickens.
Draba Verna: annual weed of Europe and North America having a rosette of basal leaves and tiny flowers followed by oblong seed capsules.
Ball Nettle: coarse prickly weed having pale yellow flowers and yellow berrylike fruit; common throughout southern and eastern United States.
Amsinckia Intermedia: annual of western United States with coiled spikes of yellow-orange coiled flowers.
Common Basil: annual or perennial of tropical Asia having spikes of small white flowers and aromatic leaves; one of the most important culinary herbs; used in salads, casseroles, sauces and some liqueurs.
Black Knapweed: a weedy perennial with tough wiry stems and purple flowers; native to Europe but widely naturalized.
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.
Abutilon Theophrasti: tall annual herb or subshrub of tropical Asia having velvety leaves and yellow flowers and yielding a strong fiber; naturalized in southeastern Europe and United States.
Aristolochia Clematitis: creeping plant having curving flowers thought to resemble fetuses; native to Europe; naturalized Great Britain and eastern North America.
Common Buttercup: perennial Old World buttercup with golden to sulphur yellow flowers in late spring to early summer; naturalized in North America.
Cockle-Bur: any coarse weed of the genus Xanthium having spiny burrs.
Broad-Leaved Plantain: common European perennial naturalized worldwide; a troublesome weed.
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.