- All leguminous forage aptly located foremost alphabetically - Animal Liberation Front doubled a plant used for fodder - Forage crop - Lucerne - Mr Garnett has an Italian car in Lucerne - Mr Garnett repeated a forage plant - plant with purple flowers
- A colour in a rainbow - Colour of the rainbow - Hue in rainbow - Plant with bluish-purple flowers - Purplish-blue - Six love to hire out The Color Purple when blue - Spectral colour
- A sort of hunting dog; -- perhaps from Lucerne, in
Switzerland. - An animal whose fur was formerly much in request (by some
supposed to be the lynx). - A leguminous plant (Medicago sativa), having bluish purple
cloverlike flowers, cultivated for fodder; -- called also alfalfa. - A lamp.
- A climbing plant (Ipomoea purpurea) having handsome,
funnel-shaped flowers, usually red, pink, purple, white, or variegated,
sometimes pale blue. See Dextrorsal.
- Peanut - The fruit of the Arachis hypogaea (native country
uncertain); the peanut; the earthnut. - A leguminous, twining plant (Apios tuberosa), producing
clusters of dark purple flowers and having a root tuberous and pleasant
to the taste. - The dwarf ginseng (Aralia trifolia). - A European plant of the genus Bunium (B. flexuosum),
having an edible root of a globular shape and sweet, aromatic taste; --
called also earthnut, earth chestnut, hawknut, and pignut.
- An annual cruciferous plant with reddish purple or white
flowers (Malcolmia maritima). It is called in England Virginia stock,
but the plant comes from the Mediterranean.
- Scarlet flowering plant - A plant of the genus Anagallis, of which one species (A.
arvensis) has small flowers, usually scarlet, but sometimes purple,
blue, or white, which speedily close at the approach of bad weather.
- Showy flower - Viola plant - A plant of the genus Viola (V. tricolor) and its blossom,
originally purple and yellow. Cultivated varieties have very large
flowers of a great diversity of colors. Called also heart's-ease,
love-in-idleness, and many other quaint names.
- A low plant with fleshy leaves (Sedum telephium), having
clusters of purple flowers. It is found on dry, sandy places, and on
old walls, in England, and has become naturalized in America. Called
also stonecrop, and live-forever.