Tulip vs Rose - What's the difference?
tulip | rose |
A type of flowering plant, genus Tulipa .
* 1876 — " No. CCCXL, April 1876, Vol. LII.
* , chapter=10
, title= The flower of this plant.
A shrub of the genus Rosa , with red, pink, white or yellow flowers.
A flower of the rose plant.
A plant or species in the rose family. (Rosaceae)
Something resembling a rose flower.
(heraldiccharge) The rose flower, usually depicted with five petals, five barbs, and a circular seed.
A purplish-red or pink colour, the colour of some rose flowers.
A round nozzle for a sprinkling can or hose.
The base of a light socket.
(mathematics) Any of various flower-like polar graphs of sinusoids or their squares.
(mathematics, graph theory) A graph with only one vertex.
(poetic) To make rose-coloured; to redden or flush.
* Shakespeare
(poetic) To perfume, as with roses.
Having a purplish-red or pink colour. See rosy.
(rise)
As nouns the difference between tulip and rose
is that tulip is a type of flowering plant, genus Tulipa while rose is a shrub of the genus Rosa, with red, pink, white or yellow flowers.As a verb rose is
to make rose-coloured; to redden or flush.As an adjective rose is
having a purplish-red or pink colour. See rosy.As a proper noun Rose is
{{given name|female|from=Latin}}.tulip
English
Noun
(en noun)- "The sturdy burghers of Holland took the tulip mania so badly that single bulbs that could not flower till another year would sell for more than $2000 apiece."
The Mirror and the Lamp, passage=He looked round the poor room, at the distempered walls, and the bad engravings in meretricious frames, the crinkly paper and wax flowers on the chiffonier; and he thought of a room like Father Bryan's, with panelling, with cut glass, with tulips in silver pots, such a room as he had hoped to have for his own.}}
See also
* (wikipedia) * (Tulipa) * (Tulipa)Anagrams
* ---- ==Volapük==Declension
(vo-decl-noun)rose
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) ). Possibly ultimately a derivation from a verb for "to grow" only attested in Indo-Iranian (*Hwardh-'', compare Sanskrit ''vardh- , with relatives in Avestan).Noun
(s)Verb
(ros)- A maid yet rosed over with the virgin crimson of modesty.
- (Tennyson)
