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Fireweed   /fˈaɪərwˌid/   Listen
Fireweed

noun
1.
Tall North American perennial with creeping rootstocks and narrow leaves and spikes of pinkish-purple flowers occurring in great abundance in burned-over areas or recent clearings; an important honey plant.  Synonyms: Epilobium angustifolium, giant willowherb, rosebay willowherb, wickup.
2.
An American weedy plant with small white or greenish flowers.  Synonym: Erechtites hieracifolia.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Fireweed" Quotes from Famous Books



... the wind by spreading their sails.—On low lands in the cool, temperate climate of Europe, Asia, and North America, is a common plant here known as great willow-herb, a kind of fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium). There are several kinds of fireweeds. This one grows from three to five feet high, and bears pretty pink flowers. In mellow soil the slender rootstocks spread extensively, and each year new sprouts spring ...
— Seed Dispersal • William J. Beal

... bear's head, which shoots up all over the charred soil whenever a tract of forest is burned. Other undergrowth may come up in the following spring, but for the first year nothing appears except the red "fireweed," and that grows so thickly that the burnt wood is a blaze of color, out of which the blackened trunks of the old trees stand up naked ...
— Bear Brownie - The Life of a Bear • H. P. Robinson

... where many logs have burned; Among your stones the fireweed may grow. The brant[1] are flown, the maple-leaves have turned, The goldenrod is brown—and we must go. ...
— Camping For Boys • H.W. Gibson

... more hewers of wood, not drawers of water, and the axe swung all around, and new clearings were made and earlier ones broadened, and where fireweed first followed, the burning of the logs there were timothy and clover, though rough the mowing yet, and the State was "settled." Roads through the woods showed wagon-ruts, now well defined; houses were not so far apart, and about them were young orchards. ...
— A Man and a Woman • Stanley Waterloo

... the east came more hewers of wood, not drawers of water, and the axe swung all around, and new clearings were made and earlier ones broadened, and where fireweed first followed, the burning of the logs there were timothy and clover, though rough the mowing yet, and the State was "settled." Roads through the woods showed wagon-ruts, now well defined; houses were ...
— A Man and a Woman • Stanley Waterloo



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