salvia

See also Salvia

English

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Etymology

From Latin salvia (sage).

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ˈsælvɪə/

Noun

salvia (plural salvias)

  1. A plant in the genus Salvia, such as sage.
    • 2007 July 12, Leslie Land, “Garden Q.&A.”, New York Times:
      But strong-stemmed bushy plants like salvias, coneflowers, cosmos, marigolds, nicotianas and zinnias should be cut back only to the next strong branch or pair of branches.

External links

Anagrams


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Finnish

(index sa)

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ˈsɑlʋiɑ/
  • Hyphenation: sal‧vi‧a

Noun

salvia

  1. sage (herb)

Declension

Anagrams


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Italian

Noun

salvia f (plural salvie)

  1. sage

Anagrams


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Latin

Etymology

From salvus (well, unharmed).

Pronunciation

Noun

salvia (genitive salviae); f, first declension

  1. sage

Inflection

Number Singular Plural
nominative salvia salviae
genitive salviae salviārum
dative salviae salviīs
accusative salviam salviās
ablative salviā salviīs
vocative salvia salviae

Descendants


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Spanish

Etymology

From Latin salvia.

Noun

salvia f (plural salvias)

  1. sage
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Last modified on 19 May 2013, at 19:07