Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Any of various annual plants of the genus Amaranthus having dense green or reddish clusters of tiny flowers and including weeds, ornamentals, and species cultivated for their edible leaves and seeds.
- noun The small edible seeds of several of these species.
- noun An imaginary flower that never fades.
- noun A deep reddish purple to dark or grayish, purplish red.
- noun A dark red to purple azo dye.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun An imaginary flower supposed never to fade: used chiefly in poetry.
- noun A plant of the genus Amarantus (which see). The globe-amaranth, Gomphrena globosa, of the same natural order.
- noun A name given to mixtures of coloring matters of which the chief constituent is magenta (which see).
- noun Same as
purple heart . - noun An acid dyestuff, of the monoazo type, which dyes wool and silk a pure bluish red that is moderately fast to light and milling. It is known by various other names, as azo acid-rubine, Bordeaux S, and fast red.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Poetic An imaginary flower supposed never to fade.
- noun (Bot.) A genus of ornamental annual plants (Amaranthus) of many species, with green, purplish, or crimson flowers.
- noun A color inclining to purple.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Any of various
herbs , of thegenus Amaranthus . - noun Their flowers' characteristic
purplish red color; ared topurple azo dye used as afood colouring and incosmetics . - noun The
seed of these plants, used as acereal .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun seed of amaranth plants used as a native cereal in Central and South America
- noun any of various plants of the genus Amaranthus having dense plumes of green or red flowers; often cultivated for food
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Now widely sold in health food stores and supermarkets north of the border, amaranth is also available on the Internet (see Sources, below.)
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Now widely sold in health food stores and supermarkets north of the border, amaranth is also available on the Internet (see Sources, below.)
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Current interest in amaranth, while well-deserved, gives no indication of the cultural conflict it once caused during the sometimes painful birth of a new nation.
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Current interest in amaranth, while well-deserved, gives no indication of the cultural conflict it once caused during the sometimes painful birth of a new nation.
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Thankfully, nutritious amaranth is now cultivated for its seeds, used in candy and cereal.
Amaranth Greens with Poblano Chile Strips: Quintoniles con Rajas 2005
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Alegrías, whose name is derived from the Spanish word for "happy", are made from the highly nutritious, ancient grain amaranth.
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Alegrías, whose name is derived from the Spanish word for "happy", are made from the highly nutritious, ancient grain amaranth.
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The spinachlike green called amaranth is delicious in salads and looks beautiful in the garden with its wide, maroon-tinged leaves.
THE ARROWS COOKBOOK Clark Frasier 2003
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I have already blogged three recipes using chauli aka amaranth greens,
Indian food, Andhra recipes and Global cuisine inspired cooking 2008
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I have already blogged three recipes using chauli aka amaranth greens,
Indian food, Andhra recipes and Global cuisine inspired cooking 2008
uselessness commented on the word amaranth
Caress the one, the Never-Fading
Rain in your heart - the tears of snow-white sorrow
Caress the one, the hiding amaranth
In a land of the daybreak
-Nightwish
November 25, 2007
hernesheir commented on the word amaranth
Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Agreement cannot be cancelled". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.
January 19, 2013
chained_bear commented on the word amaranth
Note on salmonella.
October 6, 2017