Stinking Nightshade meaning in Urdu
Stinking Nightshade Synonyms
Stinking Nightshade Definitions
1) Stinking Nightshade, Black Henbane, Henbane, Hyoscyamus Niger : ایک زہریلا پیڑ : (noun) poisonous fetid Old World herb having sticky hairy leaves and yellow-brown flowers; yields hyoscyamine and scopolamine.
Useful Words
Black Nightshade : بادنجانیان ایک زہریلا پودا , Aconitum Lycoctonum : زہریلا پھولدار پودا , Blue Mahoe : جنگلی درخت , American Pennyroyal : ہمونا جڑی بوٹی , Common Horehound : خوشبودار پھولوں والی جڑی بوٹی , Alnus Glutinosa : شہتوت کی قسم کا درخت , Mentha Piperita : پودینہ , Artemisia Vulgaris : برنجاسف جڑی بوٹی , Herb Paris : زہریلی بوٹی , Coltsfoot : سدا بہار بوٹی , Aconitum Napellus : ایک زہریلا پودا , Actaea Rubra : لال زہریلی بیری , Black Medick : یورپی جڑی بوٹی , Cassia Alata : گرم خطےکی ایک جھاڑی یا پودا پیلے پھولوں والا , Caoutchouc Tree : ایمازونی ربڑ کا درخت , Gleditsia Triacanthos : کانٹے دار امریکی پودا , Glycine Max : سویابین , Black-Eyed Susan : گھنٹے بھر کا پھول , Polemonium Viscosum : پتھریلی چٹانوں میں پائی جانے والی ایک بدبودار چپچپی بوٹی , Geranium Robertianum : گل بوٹی , Acacia Catechu : کانٹے دار اکاشیا , Abutilon Theophrasti : چائنا جوٹ جڑی بوٹی , Arere : مغربی مغربی کا ایک درخت , Holly-Leaves Barberry : نیلے بیر کا درخت , Common Purslane : خرفہ سبزی , Common Kingsnake : پیلی دھاری والا سانپ , Catmint : بالوں والی بوٹی , Carolina Jasmine : زرد چنبیلی , Hoary Pea : پھلی دار پودا , Anthriscus Cereifolium : مہک دار پودا , Common Ivy : سدا بہار بیل
Useful Words Definitions
Black Nightshade: Eurasian herb naturalized in America having white flowers and poisonous hairy foliage and bearing black berries that are sometimes poisonous but sometimes edible.
Aconitum Lycoctonum: poisonous Eurasian perennial herb with broad rounded leaves and yellow flowers and fibrous rootstock.
Blue Mahoe: erect forest tree of Cuba and Jamaica having variably hairy leaves and orange-yellow or orange-red flowers; yields a moderately dense timber for cabinetwork and gunstocks.
American Pennyroyal: erect hairy branching American herb having purple-blue flowers; yields an essential oil used as an insect repellent and sometimes in folk medicine.
Common Horehound: European aromatic herb with hairy leaves and numerous white flowers in axillary cymes; leaves yield a bitter extract use medicinally and as flavoring.
Alnus Glutinosa: medium-sized tree with brown-black bark and woody fruiting catkins; leaves are hairy beneath.
Mentha Piperita: herb with downy leaves and small purple or white flowers that yields a pungent oil used as a flavoring.
Artemisia Vulgaris: European tufted aromatic perennial herb having hairy red or purple stems and dark green leaves downy white below and red-brown florets.
Herb Paris: European herb with yellow-green flowers resembling and closely related to the trilliums; reputed to be poisonous.
Coltsfoot: perennial herb with large rounded leaves resembling a colt's foot and yellow flowers appearing before the leaves do; native to Europe but now nearly cosmopolitan; used medicinally especially formerly.
Aconitum Napellus: a poisonous herb native to northern Europe having hooded blue-purple flowers; the dried leaves and roots yield aconite.
Actaea Rubra: North American perennial herb with alternately compound leaves and racemes of small white flowers followed by bright red oval poisonous berries.
Black Medick: prostrate European herb with small yellow flowers and curved black pods; naturalized in North America.
Cassia Alata: tropical shrub (especially of Americas) having yellow flowers and large leaves whose juice is used as a cure for ringworm and poisonous bites; sometimes placed in genus Cassia.
Caoutchouc Tree: deciduous tree of the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers having leathery leaves and fragrant yellow-white flowers; it yields a milky juice that is the chief source of commercial rubber.
Gleditsia Triacanthos: tall usually spiny North American tree having small greenish-white flowers in drooping racemes followed by long twisting seed pods; yields very hard durable reddish-brown wood; introduced to temperate Old World.
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.
Black-Eyed Susan: annual weedy herb with ephemeral yellow purple-eyed flowers; Old World tropics; naturalized as a weed in North America.
Polemonium Viscosum: tall herb of the Rocky Mountains having sticky leaves and an offensive smell.
Geranium Robertianum: a sticky low herb with small reddish-purple flowers; widespread in the northern hemisphere.
Acacia Catechu: East Indian spiny tree having twice-pinnate leaves and yellow flowers followed by flat pods; source of black catechu.
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.
Arere: large west African tree having large palmately lobed leaves and axillary cymose panicles of small white flowers and one-winged seeds; yields soft white to pale yellow wood.
Holly-Leaves Barberry: ornamental evergreen shrub of Pacific coast of North America having dark green pinnate leaves and racemes of yellow flowers followed by blue-black berries.
Common Purslane: weedy trailing mat-forming herb with bright yellow flowers cultivated for its edible mildly acid leaves eaten raw or cooked especially in Indian and Greek and Middle Eastern cuisine; cosmopolitan.
Common Kingsnake: widespread in United States except northern regions; black or brown with yellow bands.
Catmint: hairy aromatic perennial herb having whorls of small white purple-spotted flowers in a terminal spike; used in the past as a domestic remedy; strongly attractive to cats.
Carolina Jasmine: poisonous woody evergreen vine of southeastern United States having fragrant yellow funnel-shaped flowers.
Hoary Pea: a plant of the genus Tephrosia having pinnate leaves and white or purplish flowers and flat hairy pods.
Anthriscus Cereifolium: aromatic annual Old World herb cultivated for its finely divided and often curly leaves for use especially in soups and salads.
Common Ivy: Old World vine with lobed evergreen leaves and black berrylike fruits.
Related Words
Close Words
Stinking : خراب , Stinking Smut : گندم کی بیماری , Stinking Wattle : بدبو دار اکاشیا
Close Words Definitions
Stinking: very bad.
Stinking Smut: disease of wheat characterized by replacement of the grains with greasy masses of smelly smut spores.
Stinking Wattle: scrubby Australian acacia having extremely foul-smelling blossoms.