释义 |
Definition of henbit in English: henbitnoun ˈhɛnbɪtˈhenbit A dead-nettle with purple flowers and partly prostrate stems, native to Eurasia. 宝盖草 Genus Lamium, family Labiatae: several species, in particular L. amplexicaule Example sentencesExamples - A beautiful, but quite inadvertent crop of henbit was flourishing in this field east of Lincoln this week.
- Early pre-plant treatments allow producers to burndown winter annuals including henbit and mustards and early summer annuals, including giant ragweed, common sunflower and lambsquarter.
- Many winter annual weeds, including common chickweed, purple deadnettle, henbit, and cressleaf groundsel, have become increasingly problematic in corn, soybean, and wheat production.
- Then winter arrives - usually for about two weeks - and we get new weeds - chickweed, henbit and annual bluegrass.
- Weeds such as henbit and pennycress are winter annuals that generally emerge in the fall.
OriginLate 16th century: apparently a translation of Low German or Dutch hoenderbeet. Definition of henbit in US English: henbitnounˈhenbit A dead-nettle with purple flowers and partly prostrate stems, native to Eurasia, several kinds of which have become widely naturalized in North America. 宝盖草 Genus Lamium, family Labiatae: several species, in particular L. amplexicaule Example sentencesExamples - Early pre-plant treatments allow producers to burndown winter annuals including henbit and mustards and early summer annuals, including giant ragweed, common sunflower and lambsquarter.
- Many winter annual weeds, including common chickweed, purple deadnettle, henbit, and cressleaf groundsel, have become increasingly problematic in corn, soybean, and wheat production.
- Then winter arrives - usually for about two weeks - and we get new weeds - chickweed, henbit and annual bluegrass.
- A beautiful, but quite inadvertent crop of henbit was flourishing in this field east of Lincoln this week.
- Weeds such as henbit and pennycress are winter annuals that generally emerge in the fall.
OriginLate 16th century: apparently a translation of Low German or Dutch hoenderbeet. |