Anagallis arvensis: Difference between revisions

From LSJ

Ῥᾳθυμίας περίφευγε (γὰρ φεῦγε) καὶ κακοὺς φίλους → Malos amicos et levitatem omnem fuge → Die schlechten Freunde meide und Vergnügungssucht

Menander, Monostichoi, 467
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{lael
{{lael
|lgtx=[[ἁλικάκκαβον]], [[αἴλουρος]], [[ἄκορον]], [[ἀερῖτις]], [[ἀναγαλλίς]], [[ἀναγαλλὶς ἡ κυανῆ]], [[αὐγῖτις]]
|lgtx=[[ἁλικάκκαβον]], [[αἴλουρος]], [[ἄκορον]], [[ἀερῖτις]], [[ἀναγαλλίς]], [[ἀναγαλλὶς ἡ κυανῆ]], [[αὐγῖτις]], [[αἰλούρου ὀφθαλμός]]
}}
}}
{{wkpen
{{wkpen

Latest revision as of 13:15, 13 December 2022

Latin > Greek

ἁλικάκκαβον, αἴλουρος, ἄκορον, ἀερῖτις, ἀναγαλλίς, ἀναγαλλὶς ἡ κυανῆ, αὐγῖτις, αἰλούρου ὀφθαλμός

Wikipedia EN

Anagallis arvensis
Anagallis arvensis

Anagallis arvensis (syn. Lysimachia arvensis), commonly known as the scarlet pimpernel, red pimpernel, red chickweed, poor man's barometer, poor man's weather-glass, shepherd's weather glass or shepherd's clock, is a species of low-growing annual plant with brightly coloured flowers, most often scarlet but also bright blue and sometimes pink. The native range of the species is Europe and Western Asia and North Africa. The species has been distributed widely by humans, either deliberately as an ornamental flower or accidentally. A. arvensis is now naturalised almost worldwide, with a range that encompasses the Americas, Central and East Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, Malesia, the Pacific Islands, Australasia and Southern Africa.