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Flowering   /flˈaʊərɪŋ/   Listen
adjective
Flowering  adj.  (Bot.) Having conspicuous flowers; used as an epithet with many names of plants; as, flowering ash; flowering dogwood; flowering almond, etc.
Flowering fern, a genus of showy ferns (Osmunda), with conspicuous bivalvular sporangia. They usually grow in wet places.
Flowering plants, plants which have stamens and pistils, and produce true seeds; phenogamous plants; distinguished from flowerless plants.
Flowering rush, a European rushlike plant (Butomus umbellatus), with an umbel of rosy blossoms.



noun
Flowering  n.  
1.
The act of blossoming, or the season when plants blossom; florification.
2.
The act of adorning with flowers.



verb
Flower  v. t.  To embellish with flowers; to adorn with imitated flowers; as, flowered silk.



Flower  v. i.  (past & past part. flowered; pres. part. flowering)  
1.
To blossom; to bloom; to expand the petals, as a plant; to produce flowers; as, this plant flowers in June.
2.
To come into the finest or fairest condition. "Their lusty and flowering age." "When flowered my youthful spring."
3.
To froth; to ferment gently, as new beer. "That beer did flower a little."
4.
To come off as flowers by sublimation. (Obs.) "Observations which have flowered off."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Flowering" Quotes from Famous Books



... herself doing as she was bid. Margaret returned with her apron full of a flowering herb. She made a decoction, and took it to the bedside; and before giving it to the patient, took a spoonful herself, and smacked her lips hypocritically. "That is fair," said he, with a feeble attempt at humour. "Why, 'tis sweet, and now 'tis bitter." She engaged him ...
— The Cloister and the Hearth • Charles Reade

... sting one of us, well, that is the wasp's initiative, not ours; all we do is to wait for the swelling to go down. Whenever we do climb into local fame and notice, it is by indirect methods; if it happens to be a good flowering year for magnolias the neighbourhood observes: 'Have you seen the Gurtleberry's magnolia? It is a perfect mass of flowers,' and we go about telling people that there are fifty- seven blossoms as ...
— The Toys of Peace • Saki

... cell, including, in most cases, one ovule or incipient seed—in some cases many—the style being lateral or terminal. Most flowers thus formed produce edible and harmless fruits. Loudon says: 'The ligneous species, which constitute this order, include the finest flowering shrub in the world—the rose—and trees which produce the most useful and agreeable fruit of temperate climates—namely, the apple, pear, plum, cherry, apricot, peach, and nectarine;' and he might have included the medlar ...
— Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 456 - Volume 18, New Series, September 25, 1852 • Various

... which Southey took as a model in blank verse, and which a Boston critic wonders whether anyone ever read through. "Pericles and Aspasia," and the finest of his "Imaginary Conversations," were the flowering of half a century of thought. There are few readers who do not prefer Landor's prose to his verse, for in the former he does not aim at the dramatic: the passion peculiar to verse is not congenial to his genius. He sympathizes most fully with men and women in repose, when intellect, not ...
— The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 104, June, 1866 • Various

... a long story to trace the flowering in the Aeneid of the seedling sown in Vergil's boyhood garden-plot.[1] The note of intimacy, unexpected in an epic, the occasional drawing of the veil to reveal the poet's own countenance, an un-Homeric ...
— Vergil - A Biography • Tenney Frank


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