Definition of Royal agaric

1. Noun. Widely distributed edible mushroom resembling the fly agaric.

Exact synonyms: Amanita Caesarea, Caesar's Agaric
Generic synonyms: Agaric
Group relationships: Amanita, Genus Amanita

Lexicographical Neighbors of Royal Agaric

rowport
rowports
rows
rowt
rowted
rowth
rowths
rowting
rowts
rox
roxarsone
roxatidine
roxbyite
royal
royal agaric (current term)
royal blue
royal blues
royal brace
royal bumps
royal casino
royal charter
royal court
royal families
royal family
royal fern
royal flush
royal flushes
royal house

Literary usage of Royal agaric

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

1. Forty years in the medical profession, 1858-1898 by John Janvier Black (1900)
"... or royal agaric. Here the gills, ring, and stalk are yellow, not white, no scales on the stalk, but a bag-like membrane through which the stalk runs. ..."

2. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.) (1905)
"The royal amanita, or royal agaric (Amanita caesarea).—This is one of the most beautiful of all the mushrooms. It occurs in July and August, ..."

3. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.), Wild Flower Preservation Society of America (1905)
"The royal amanita, or royal agaric (Amanita^ caesarea).—This is one of the most beautiful of all the mushrooms. It occurs in July and August, ..."

4. Eating to Live: With Some Advice to the Gouty, the Rheumatic, and the by John Janvier Black (1906)
"... or royal agaric. Here the gills, ring, and stalk are yellow, not white, no scales on the stalk, but a bag-like membrane through which the stalk runs. ..."

5. Eating to Live: With Some Advice to the Gouty, the Rheumatic, and the by John Janvier Black (1906)
"... or royal agaric. Here the gills, ring, and stalk are yellow, not white, no scales on the stalk, but a bag-like membrane through which the stalk runs. ..."

6. Yearbook of the United States Department of Agriculture by United States Dept. of Agriculture (1898)
"With these marked differences, there seems to be ho good reason why the fly agaric should be mistaken for the royal agaric. THE DEADLY AGARIC. ..."

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