释义 |
hy·dran·gea \hīˈdrānjə sometimes -ran- or -raan-, chiefly in substand speech ˌhīdəˈr-\ noun Etymology: New Latin, from hydr- + -angea (from Greek angeion vessel); probably from the shape of the seed capsule — more at angi- 1. capitalized : a large genus of widely distributed shrubs and one woody vine (family Saxifragaceae) with opposite leaves and corymbose clusters of usually showy flowers — compare hydrangeaceae 2. -s : a plant of the genus Hydrangea having ample white or tinted flower clusters in which all or most of the flowers are sterile: as a. : a shrub (H. macrophylla) commonly grown in greenhouses b. : a hardy fall-blooming shrub (H. paniculata or its variety H. paniculata grandiflora) 3. : the dried rhizome and roots of the wild hydrangea (Hydrangea arborescens) formerly used in pharmacy as a diuretic |