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Sea holly   /si hˈɑli/   Listen
noun
Holly  n.  
1.
(Bot.) A tree or shrub of the genus Ilex. The European species (Ilex Aquifolium) is best known, having glossy green leaves, with a spiny, waved edge, and bearing berries that turn red or yellow about Michaelmas. Note: The holly is much used to adorn churches and houses, at Christmas time, and hence is associated with scenes of good will and rejoicing. It is an evergreen tree, and has a finegrained, heavy, white wood. Its bark is used as a febrifuge, and the berries are violently purgative and emetic. The American holly is the Ilex opaca, and is found along the coast of the United States, from Maine southward.
2.
(Bot.) The holm oak. See 1st Holm.
Holly-leaved oak (Bot.), the black scrub oak. See Scrub oak.
Holly rose (Bot.), a West Indian shrub, with showy, yellow flowers (Turnera ulmifolia).
Sea holly (Bot.), a species of Eryngium. See Eryngium.



Sea holly  n.  (Bot.) An evergeen seashore plant (Eryngium maritimum). See Eryngium.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sea holly" Quotes from Famous Books



... sailors—the first to be familiar with the potato—who attributed to this particular element of their diet ashore the generally stimulating qualities of their life in port. The eryngo (Eryngium maritimum), or sea holly, which also had an erotic reputation in Elizabethan times, may well have acquired it in the same way. Many other vegetables have a similar reputation, which they still retain. Thus onions are regarded as aphrodisiacal, and were so regarded by the Greeks, as we learn ...
— Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 5 (of 6) • Havelock Ellis



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