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butter-and-eggs
[ buht-er-uhn-egz ]
noun
- any of certain plants whose flowers are of two shades of yellow, as the toadflax, Linaria vulgaris.
butter-and-eggs
noun
- functioning as singular any of various plants, such as toadflax, the flowers of which are of two shades of yellow
Word History and Origins
Origin of butter-and-eggs1
Example Sentences
But that was changing: He pointed to butter-and-eggs, oxeye daisies, bellflowers, tufted vetch, hemp nettle, spotted jewelweed, creeping Charlie, common tansy, orange hawkweed.
“A healthy Adrian Gonzalez is scary for opposing pitchers. He’s been butter-and-eggs for how many years? He’s a consistent at-bat, every time. Him and I in the lineup could be fun.”
Another flower of the waste places is a pretty little toad flax, or butter-and-eggs.
I am always sure when I see bouncing-bet, butter-and-eggs, and tawny lilies growing in a tangle together that in their midst may be found an untrodden door-stone, a fallen chimney, or a filled-in well.
The butter-and-eggs plant, they were well aware, was as free as the clover, or the milk-weed blossoms, or any other of the wild flowers.
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