sweet-willow - meaning and definition. What is sweet-willow
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What (who) is sweet-willow - definition

SPECIES OF PLANT
Salix lasiandra; Pacific Willow; Shining Willow; Shining willow; Pacific willow

sweet-willow      
n.
(Bot.) Dutch myrtle, sweet-gale, Scotch myrtle (Myrica gale).
willow pattern         
  • Different shapes in a willow pattern, 19th century
  • Comparable design in [[Chinese export porcelain]], c. 1760
  • Another version, Sweden
  • Illustration of the Willow pattern (1917).
DISTINCTIVE AND ELABORATE CHINOISERIE PATTERN, PRIMARILY USED ON POTTERY
Willow Pattern; Willow-pattern ware; Willow Ware; Willow pattern pottery
¦ noun a conventional design in pottery featuring a Chinese scene depicted in blue on white, typically including figures on a bridge, a willow tree, and birds.
Willow Rosenberg         
  • The one-shot comic cover of ''Willow: Goddesses and Monsters'' showing the character in an embrace with Aluwyn. Artwork by [[Jo Chen]].
CHARACTER IN BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER
Buffy The Vampire Slayer television show/Willow Rosenberg; Willow Rosenburg; User:Zythe/Willow Rosenberg; Willow (Buffy the Vampire Slayer); Vamp Willow; Dark Willow
Willow Rosenberg is a fictional character created for the fantasy television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997–2003). She was developed by Joss Whedon and portrayed throughout the TV series by Alyson Hannigan.

Wikipedia

Salix lucida

Salix lucida, the shining willow, Pacific willow, red willow, or whiplash willow, is a species of willow native to northern and western North America, occurring in wetland habitats. It is the largest willow found in British Columbia.

It is a deciduous large shrub or small tree growing to 4–15 metres (13–49 ft) tall. The shoots are greenish-brown to grey-brown. The leaves are narrow elliptic to lanceolate, 4–17 centimetres (1+126+12 in) long and 1–3.5 cm (121+12 in) broad, glossy dark green above, usually glaucous green below, hairless or thinly hairy. The flowers are yellow catkins 1–9 cm (123+12 in) long, produced in late spring after the leaves emerge.

The subspecies are:

  • S. l. lucida – shining willow, Newfoundland west to eastern Saskatchewan, and south to Maryland and South Dakota
  • S. l. lasiandra (Benth.) E.Murray (syn. S. lasiandra Benth.) – Pacific willow, Alaska east to Northwest Territory, and south to California and New Mexico.
  • S. l. caudata (Nutt.) E.Murray – whiplash willow, interior western North America from eastern British Columbia south to eastern California and Nevada, included in S. l. lasiandra by some authors.

It is closely related to Salix pentandra of Europe and Asia.