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thyrse
[ thurs ]
noun
, Botany.
- a compact branching inflorescence, as of the lilac, in which the main axis is indeterminate and the lateral axes are determinate.
thyrse
/ ˈθɜːsəs; θɜːs /
noun
- botany a type of inflorescence, occurring in the lilac and grape, in which the main branch is racemose and the lateral branches cymose
thyrse
/ thûrs /
- A dense inflorescence in which the side branches end in cymes, as in the lilac.
- Also called thyrsus
- See more at inflorescence
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Derived Forms
- ˈthyrsoid, adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of thyrse1
C17: from French: thyrsus
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Example Sentences
Flowers in a terminal thyrse or dense panicle, often polygamous, most of them with imperfect pistils and sterile; pedicels jointed.
From Project Gutenberg
Flowers.—White; in a thyrse a foot long; many of them imperfect.
From Project Gutenberg
The shy bud hesitateth still To show the secret thyrse of white.
From Project Gutenberg
Round about him Bacchus fair Bacchantês, Bearing cymbals, flutes, and thyrses, Wild from Naxian groves, or Zantê's Vineyards, sing delirious verses.
From Project Gutenberg
Charley brought me a branch of a Cassia with a thyrse of showy yellow blossoms, which he said he had plucked from a shrub about fifteen feet high.
From Project Gutenberg
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