: any of a genus (Taraxacum) of yellow-flowered composite herbs with milky sap
especially: one (T. officinale) sometimes grown as a potherb and nearly cosmopolitan as a weed
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These products function to kill existing non-grassy weeds such as dandelions, henbit, chickweed, clover, plantain, thistles, and others.—Neil Sperry, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 7 Feb. 2025 For the bevy of current acts claiming to have burrowed down into the roots of country music, a good many of them have never actually cracked far enough into the surface of the soil to even plant a dandelion — all the while, Nick Shoulders is busy doing his best groundhog impression.—Aaron Davis, Sacramento Bee, 1 Feb. 2025 For vegetables and fruits, pet turtles can have dandelions, mustard greens, cantaloupe and bananas, among other options.—Krystal Nurse, USA TODAY, 23 Jan. 2025 The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth by Zoë Schlanger
Plants surround us, yet their lives are so different from ours that even a dandelion can seem alien.—Joe Spring, Smithsonian Magazine, 9 Dec. 2024 See All Example Sentences for dandelion
Word History
Etymology
Middle English dendelyoun, from Anglo-French dent de lion, literally, lion's tooth
: any of a genus of yellow-flowered weedy plants related to the daisies
especially: one with long deeply toothed stemless leaves sometimes grown as a potherb
Etymology
from early French dent de lion "dandelion," literally, "tooth of the lion"; dent derived from Latin dens "tooth" — related to dental
Word Origin
Sometimes plants are named for their resemblance, real or imagined, to animal shapes. The dandelion might not be a plant we would be quick to connect with a lion's teeth. And yet, in early French this common plant with its yellow flowers was called dent de lion, meaning literally "tooth of the lion." The dandelion leaves have deep notches along the edges. These make the leaves appear to have a row of sharp triangular teeth. In time the French name came to be spelled and pronounced as one word when it came into English, giving us dandelion today.
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