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rhododendron
[roh-duh-den-druhn]
noun
any evergreen or deciduous shrub or tree belonging to the genus Rhododendron, of the heath family, having rounded clusters of showy, pink, purple, or white flowers and oval or oblong leaves.
rhododendron
/ ˌrəʊdəˈdɛndrən /
noun
Also called (US): rosebay. any ericaceous shrub of the genus Rhododendron , native to S Asia but widely cultivated in N temperate regions. They are mostly evergreen and have clusters of showy red, purple, pink, or white flowers See also azalea
Word History and Origins
Origin of rhododendron1
Word History and Origins
Origin of rhododendron1
Example Sentences
Here’s that bird again, launching from the rhododendron, banging his forehead on my living room window.
Just outside her window, she could see hot-pink rhododendron flowers and the stately redwoods of the Santa Cruz Mountains.
Some are grazed inappropriately, the survey said, and many are affected by rhododendrons that smother the forest floor in a dense shade that native species cannot tolerate.
The blackened site of the plane crash, overgrown with rhododendron bushes and hidden in the quiet woodlands of eastern England, had for 80 years been the final resting place of a missing American pilot.
It's next to a type of rhododendron seedling that is the only known one in the world.
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