Definition of Jasminum sambac

1. Noun. East Indian evergreen vine cultivated for its profuse fragrant white flowers.

Exact synonyms: Arabian Jasmine
Generic synonyms: Jasmine

Lexicographical Neighbors of Jasminum Sambac

Jarrick
Jarrow
Jarvik artificial heart
Jarvik heart
Jarvis
Jas.
Jasmin
Jasmina
Jasmine
Jasmine tobacco
Jasminum
Jasminum mesnyi
Jasminum nudiflorum
Jasminum officinale
Jasminum sambac (current term)
Jason
Jason mask
Jasper
Jasper Johns
Jaspers
Jat
Jatinegara
Jatropha
Jatropha curcas
Jatropha curcus
Jatropha glandulifera
Jatropha stimulosus

Literary usage of Jasminum sambac

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Residence Among the Chinese: Inland, on the Coast, and at Sea. Being a by Robert Fortune (1857)
"Thus, of orange-flowers there are 40 Ibs. to 100 Ibs. of tea; of Aglaia there are 100 Ibs. to 100 Ibs.; and of Jasminum sambac there are 50 Ibs. to 100 Ibs. ..."

2. Odorographia: A Natural History of Raw Materials and Drugs Used in the by John Charles Sawer (1892)
"The flowers of Jasminum paniculatum, " Sieu-hing/' are frequently mixed with those of Jasminum sambac, in the proportion of 10 Ibs. of the former to 30 Ibs. ..."

3. Pharmaceutical Journal by Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain (1856)
"... paniculatum) are generally mixed with those of the Mo-le (Jasminum sambac) in the proportion of ..."

4. A Residence Among the Chinese: Inland, on the Coast, and at Sea. Being a by Robert Fortune (1857)
"Thus, of orange-flowers there are 40 Ibs. to 100 Ibs. of tea; of Aglaia there are 100 Ibs. to 100 Ibs.; and of Jasminum sambac there are 50 Ibs. to 100 Ibs. ..."

5. Odorographia: A Natural History of Raw Materials and Drugs Used in the by John Charles Sawer (1892)
"The flowers of Jasminum paniculatum, " Sieu-hing/' are frequently mixed with those of Jasminum sambac, in the proportion of 10 Ibs. of the former to 30 Ibs. ..."

6. Pharmaceutical Journal by Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain (1856)
"... paniculatum) are generally mixed with those of the Mo-le (Jasminum sambac) in the proportion of ..."

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