- Desert plants - One hundred take account of it, coming back with plants - Prickly bushes - Prickly desert plants - Prickly plant - Prickly plants - See act one for rarely spineless types
- Prickly plant - Prickly shrub - Thorny shrub - Wild rose - Wild rose from Umbria region - Same as Brier. - A plant with a slender woody stem bearing stout prickles;
especially, species of Rosa, Rubus, and Smilax.
- Evergreen shrub - Prickly-leafed plant - Wholly. - A tree or shrub of the genus Ilex. The European species
(Ilex Aguifolium) is best known, having glossy green leaves, with a
spiny, waved edge, and bearing berries that turn red or yellow about
Michaelmas. - The holm oak. See 1st Holm.
- Let this become a Scottish emblem - Prickly plant - Scottish emblem - Scottish floral emblem - Scottish national emblem - Any one of several prickly composite plants, especially
those of the genera Cnicus, Craduus, and Onopordon. The name is often
also applied to other prickly plants.
- Aztec act usually too much for Mexican native - Desert plant - Prickly plant - Prickly plants - Spiny plant - Spiny succulent plant - Any plant of the order Cactacae, as the prickly pear and
the night-blooming cereus. See Cereus. They usually have leafless stems
and branches, often beset with clustered thorns, and are mostly natives
of the warmer parts of America.
- Annoy - Let ten out, just to irritate - Noxious weed - Prickly plant - Stinging leaf - Stinging plant - A plant of the genus Urtica, covered with minute sharp
hairs containing a poison that produces a stinging sensation. Urtica
gracitis is common in the Northern, and U. chamaedryoides in the
Southern, United States. the common European species, U. urens and U.
dioica, are also found in the Eastern united States. U. pilulifera is
the Roman nettle of England.
- Prickly plant - A plant of the genus Dipsacus, of which one species (D.
fullonum) bears a large flower head covered with stiff, prickly, hooked
bracts. This flower head, when dried, is used for raising a nap on
woolen cloth. - A bur of this plant. - Any contrivance intended as a substitute for teasels in
dressing cloth. - To subject, as woolen cloth, to the action of teasels,
or any substitute for them which has an effect to raise a nap.