释义 |
Definition of tansy in English: tansynoun ˈtanziˈtænzi A plant of the daisy family with yellow flat-topped flower heads and aromatic leaves, formerly used in cooking and medicine. 艾菊 Genus Tanacetum, family Compositae: several species, in particular the common Eurasian T. vulgare Example sentencesExamples - This is how you pull tansy: plant your feet wide, bend your knees at a 90-degree angle, grasp the trunk of the tansy ragwort plant near the base, take a deep breath, and pull with everything you've got.
- Many herbs can help to deter flies, such as lavender, sweet woodruff, lemon verbena, star anise, tansy, any of the mints, rosemary, bay, chamomile, rue, elder, southernwood and basil.
- It is home to hundreds of species of wildflowers and grasses - including the tansy, meadowsweet, poppy, vetch and marigold - a host of butterflies, insects and beetles, and birds of prey such as the owl and kestrel.
- Plant tansy or basil around the patio and house to repel mosquitoes.
- Another flavouring agent was alecost, Chrysanthemum balsamita, a plant from western Asia related to tansy which was brought to England sometime in the sixteenth century.
OriginMiddle English: from Old French tanesie, probably from medieval Latin athanasia 'immortality', from Greek. Definition of tansy in US English: tansynounˈtænziˈtanzē A plant of the daisy family with yellow flat-topped flower heads and aromatic leaves, formerly used in cooking and medicine. 艾菊 Genus Tanacetum, family Compositae: several species, in particular common tansy (T. vulgare) Example sentencesExamples - Many herbs can help to deter flies, such as lavender, sweet woodruff, lemon verbena, star anise, tansy, any of the mints, rosemary, bay, chamomile, rue, elder, southernwood and basil.
- This is how you pull tansy: plant your feet wide, bend your knees at a 90-degree angle, grasp the trunk of the tansy ragwort plant near the base, take a deep breath, and pull with everything you've got.
- It is home to hundreds of species of wildflowers and grasses - including the tansy, meadowsweet, poppy, vetch and marigold - a host of butterflies, insects and beetles, and birds of prey such as the owl and kestrel.
- Plant tansy or basil around the patio and house to repel mosquitoes.
- Another flavouring agent was alecost, Chrysanthemum balsamita, a plant from western Asia related to tansy which was brought to England sometime in the sixteenth century.
OriginMiddle English: from Old French tanesie, probably from medieval Latin athanasia ‘immortality’, from Greek. |