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Definition of Golden marguerite
1. Noun. Eurasian perennial herb with hairy divided leaves and yellow flowers; naturalized in North America.
Generic synonyms: Composite, Composite Plant
Group relationships: Anthemis, Genus Anthemis
Lexicographical Neighbors of Golden Marguerite
Literary usage of Golden marguerite
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Our Garden Flowers: A Popular Study of Their Native Lands, Their Life by Harriet Louise Keeler (1910)
"The golden marguerite is a plant a good deal like Pyrethrum, bearing abundantly
from midsummer to frost beautiful daisy-like flowers. ..."
2. Our Garden Flowers: A Popular Study of Their Native Lands, Their Life by Harriet Louise Keeler (1910)
"golden marguerite Anthemis tinctoria. Anthemis, Greek, meaning obscure.
A heavy-scented perennial of abundant bloom, bearing golden-yellow daisy-like ..."
3. The Copper Handbook by Horace Jared Stevens, Walter Harvey Weed (1910)
"golden marguerite SILVER & COPPER MINING CO. Letter returned unclaimed from former
mine office, Mullan, Sh Idaho. Organized 1908, with capitalization ..."
4. Annual Report by Illinois Farmers' Institute (1905)
"... asters, sunflower, golden marguerite, golden rod, fox glove, sweet william,
pinks. There is also that great class known as bulbous plants. ..."
5. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture: A Discussion for the Amateur, and by Liberty Hyde Bailey (1916)
"Asparagus, rhubarb, hardy chrysanthemum, golden marguerite, calliopsis, and a
host of others are ready to grow again in a week or two after the old plants ..."