spanish dagger
A tall Spanish dagger stands in a desert landscape with white flowers blooming at its top.
Noun: 1. A type of arborescent yucca plant (Yucca faxoniana or Yucca gloriosa) native to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, characterized by its sword-shaped leaves and clusters of white flowers. 2. A yucca plant (Yucca aloifolia) of the southeastern United States, similar to Spanish bayonet but typically with a shorter trunk and smoother leaves.
- The arid landscape was dotted with the striking forms of the Spanish dagger, its sharp leaves pointing skyward.
- We identified the plant as a Spanish dagger due to its rosette of stiff, sword-like leaves and its tall flower spike.
- Be careful when hiking near the Spanish dagger; the tips of its leaves are extremely sharp.
- The term is used primarily in botanical and horticultural contexts to describe specific, visually similar species of yucca known for their dagger-like foliage.
- It can be used metaphorically to describe something that is both beautiful and dangerous or sharply pointed.
- Her words were like a Spanish dagger—elegant but capable of inflicting a deep wound.
- Yucca: The genus to which the Spanish dagger belongs.
- Spanish bayonet: A common name for a closely related yucca species (), often used interchangeably with "Spanish dagger," though there are botanical distinctions.
- Adam's needle: A common name for another yucca species () with thread-like filaments on the leaves.
- Yucca
- Spanish bayonet (in some contexts, though this typically refers to )
The two definitions refer to different but closely related species within the Yucca genus. The core meaning uniting them is a tall, shrub-like yucca plant with long, rigid, pointed leaves resembling daggers or swords. The first definition is more specific to a southwestern species, while the second refers to a southeastern species. Context (geographic or botanical) usually clarifies which is intended.
A tall Spanish dagger stands in a desert landscape with white flowers blooming at its top.
- arborescent yucca of southwestern United States and northern Mexico with sword-shaped leaves and white flowers
- yucca of southeastern United States similar to the Spanish bayonets but with shorter trunk and smoother leaves