orchis
See also: Orchis
English
Etymology
From the genus name.
Noun
orchis (plural orchises)
- Any plant of the genus Orchis; an orchid.
- 1871, Agnes Maule Machar, Lucy Raymond Or, The Children's Watchword, page 25:
- In spring, what a place it was for wild flowers!―as Lucy Raymond and her brothers well knew, having often brought home thence great bunches of dielytras and convallarias and orchises; and at any time some bright blossoms were generally to be found gleaming through the shade.
- 1919, Ronald Firbank, Valmouth, Duckworth, hardback edition, page 91
- He had a suit of summer mufti, and a broad-brimmed blue beaver hat looped with leaves broken from the hedgerows in the lanes, and a Leander scarf tucked full of flowers: loosestrife, meadowrue, orchis, ragged-robin.
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Translations
orchis
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Latin
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ὄρχις (órkhis, “testicle, ovary, orchid”).
Declension
Third declension i-stem.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | orchis | orchēs |
Genitive | orchis | orchium |
Dative | orchī | orchibus |
Accusative | orchem | orchēs |
Ablative | orche | orchibus |
Vocative | orchis | orchēs |
References
- orchis in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
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