Queen Anne's lace
Definition
Noun: * Queen Anne's lace: A common name for the wild carrot (Daucus carota), a flowering plant in the parsley family. It is characterized by its delicate, lacy clusters of small white flowers (forming a compound umbel) and its finely divided, fern-like leaves. The plant has a thin, edible taproot that is typically yellowish or pale in color. It is native to Eurasia but has become widely naturalized in many other regions, including North America.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- The roadside was covered in the delicate white blooms of Queen Anne's lace.
- Be careful not to confuse Queen Anne's lace with the similar-looking, but poisonous, water hemlock.
- The Queen Anne's lace plant is the wild ancestor of the cultivated carrot.
Advanced Usage
- The name "Queen Anne's lace" is often said to refer to the lace-like appearance of the flower cluster or to a legend about Queen Anne of England pricking her finger while making lace, with a single dark red or purple floret in the center of the umbel representing a drop of blood.
- In botanical and horticultural contexts, the scientific name is used for precision.
Variants and Related Words
- Wild carrot (n): The most common alternative name for Queen Anne's lace.
- Bird's nest (n): A name sometimes used for the plant, particularly when the flower umbel curls inward to form a nest-like shape as it goes to seed.
- Daucus carota (n): The formal Latin binomial (genus and species) name for the plant.
Synonyms
- Wild carrot
- Bird's nest (in reference to the seeding stage)
Notes on Different Meanings
- "Queen Anne's lace" refers specifically to this one plant species. It is not a general term for lace or for other plants with lacy flowers (e.g., some species of are sometimes called "false Queen Anne's lace").
- The term is a proper noun and is typically capitalized.
Noun
-
a widely naturalized Eurasian herb with finely cut foliage and white compound umbels of small white or yellowish flowers and thin yellowish roots
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