spignel

suomi-englanti sanakirja

spignel englanniksi

  1. (taxfmt), an ornamental plant in the (taxfmt) family found in mountain areas in Europe|Central and Europe, with roots and feathery leaves used as food and for medicinal purposes.

  2. (synonyms)|bearwort|(vern)|(vern)|meon|meu|meum

  3. (RQ:Turner New Herball) Where as the Mew of Mattiolus&11805; y&868; berwurtz of Germany & y&868; ſpiknel of Englãd (which peraduẽture was ones called Spiknard) haue a rough thyng like to the Iudiſh Spiknarde in the hygheſt parte of the root&11805; out of whiche the ſtalke cõmeth firſt furth&11805; the mew of Amatus hath y&868; ſame rough tuht lyke Spiknarde&11805; as he writeth ''in infirma parte''&11805; in the loweſt parte of the roote&11805; which thyng if it be ſo&11805; neither Matthiolus nor I know the ryght mew; (..)|translation=I would gladly consent to them that hold that the herb which is called of the apothecaries ''feniculum tortuosum'', of the Northern Englishmen spiknel, of the Dutchmen berwurtz, is the true mew, if that I could find any spicknel or berwurtz that were of two cubits high. (..) Whereas the mew of Matthiolus &91;(w)&93;, that berwurtz of Germany and that spiknel of England (which peradventure was once called spikenard) have a rough thing like to the Judish spikenard in the highest part of the root, out of which the stalk cometh first forth, the mew of Amatus &91;(w)?&93; hath the same rough tuft like spikenard, as he writeth ''in infirma parte'', in the lowest part of the root, which thing if it be so, neither Matthiolus nor I know the right mew;(nb..)

  4. (RQ:Gerard Herball)

  5. (RQ:Pliny Holland Historie of the World)

  6. (RQ:Culpeper English Physitian) ''(w)'' ſaith, The Roots of ''Spignel'' are available to provoke Urine and Womans Courſes, but if too much thereof be taken it cauſeth Headach: (..)

  7. (RQ:New World of English Words)

  8. (RQ:Bailey Dictionary)

  9. (quote-book) Sylvestre sive Thysselinum. ''Wild Milk Parsley.''|entryurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=NuicQt6ozoYC&pg=PP70|title=Dictionarium Botanicum: Or, A Botanical Dictionary for the Use of the Curious in Husbandry and Gardening.(nb...)|location=London|publisher=(...) T. Woodward(nb...), and J. Peele(nb...)|year=1728|volume=I|column=2|oclc=832248107|passage=The Root ſpreadeth divers long Strings, blackiſh without, like the ''Meum'', or ''Spicknel'', and abideth many Years.

  10. (RQ:Miller Gardeners Dictionary) Spignel.

  11. (quote-book)|location=Glasgow; Edinburgh|publisher=and Son|Blackie & Son,(nb...)|year=1840|page=18|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=w91hAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA18|oclc=20598641|passage=Roots are more generally odorous than the stems of plants, which is owing to an essential oil. Thus, ginger, horse radish, valerian, spignel, and sweet cicely, are pungent and aromatic; the root of white hellebore is bitter and nauseous.

  12. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=Groombridge & Sons,(nb...)|year=1854|page=306|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=g7NWAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA306|oclc=18013139|passage=The root of the gout-weed (''Ægopodium''), of the meum or spignel, and of the sea-holly (''Eryngium''), have all of them been held in esteem for their aromatic stimulant properties.

  13. (quote-book)|title=English Naturalists from Neckham|Neckham to Ray|Ray: A Study of the Making of the Modern World|location=Cambridge, Cambridgeshire|publisher=University Press|University Press|year=1947|section=part D (The Explorers)|page=299|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=byc9AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA299|oclc=802059680|passage=The quacks who sell Mithridatic Lovage for Spignel deserve to be shown up.

  14. (quote-book) from Creit Mhuiceann(nb..), croft of baldmoneys or spignels.

  15. (quote-book)) is a characteristic species of many meadows of less fertile sites at higher altitudes.

  16. (quote-book)|series=Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis: Studia Latina Upsaliensia of Uppsala University: Uppsala Latin Studies|seriesvolume=31|location=Uppsala|publisher=University|Uppsala Universitet|year=2007|page=107|pageurl=https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:171057/FULLTEXT01.pdfpage=107|lines=18–20|isbn=978-91-554-7031-9|issn=0562-2859|passage=Furthermore there was a garden, shining with different herbs, / in whose midst there was a limpid spring with fresh / water. With its water it nourished here garlic with spignels, / Cabbage, cress and turnips through an irrigating ditch.

  17. (quote-book)|year=2015|year_published=2016|page=140|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=BPZ_CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA140|isbn=978-1-78264-145-2|passage=You pluck a goose while it yet lives, then you butter and lard it well. A duck will do, but there's more meat on a goose. You set it within a ring of fires, supplied with a bowl of water with salt and spikenel in it.

  18. (quote-book)

  19. (quote-book)|entry=mīm|translators=Gerrit Bos; Fabian Käs|editors=Gerrit Bos; Fabian Käs; Mailyn Lübke; Guido Mensching|title=On the Nomenclature of Medicinal Drugs (Kitāb al-Talkhīṣ)|series=Islamic History and Civilization|seriesvolume=170|location=Leiden; Boston, Mass.|publisher=Publishers|Brill|year=2020|volume=2|section=paragraph 561 (folio 511;17–v,8)|page=731|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=a6nwDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA731|isbn=978-90-04-43102-7|issn=0929-2403|passage=''Mū'' (spicknel). I never met anyone who knew it and I have never seen a vernacular name for it. I myself think that it is the plant called in the vernacular ''mwr'nh''. (..) ''Mū'' is an Arabicized form of the Greek (lang), the name of spicknel (baldmoney; Meum athamanticum Jacq., Apiaceae).

  20. ''Preceded by a descriptive word'': a plant resembling (taxfmt).

  21. (RQ:Miller Gardeners Dictionary)

  22. (quote-journal)|year=1851|volume=XIX|issue=LVIII (New Series)|page=482|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=WsAEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA482|oclc=778209644|passage=It carrot is the ''daucus'' of botany, and was well known to the Greek writers, but is thought to have been by them confounded with the Cretan spignel, or Candy carrot, which grows abundantly in that island, and of which a species is found on Gog-Magog hills, in Cambridgeshire.

  23. The dried, powdered root of (taxfmt) used as a cooking spice or a medicine.

  24. (quote-book)|location=London|publisher=(...) (w),(nb...)|year=1747|page=105|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=AatdAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA105|oclc=836749902|passage=Gentian root, celtic ſpikenard, ſpignel, (''meum athamanticum'') mountain poly leaves, St. John's wort leaves, (..) each half an ounce, (..)

  25. (RQ:Twain Pudd'nhead Wilson) of opobalsamum, Indian leaf, cinnamon, zedoary, ginger, coftus, coral, cassia, euphorbium, gum tragacanth, frankincense, styrax calamita, celtic, nard, spignel, hartwort, mustard, saxifrage, dill, anise, each one dram;(nb..)"