butchers-broom - translation to spanish
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butchers-broom - translation to spanish

MESQUITO
Butcher's Broom; Butcher's broom; Butcher's-broom; Butcher's broom root; Butcher's broom roots; Butcher’s Broom; Butcher’s broom
  • ''Ruscus aculeatus'' rhizoma used in traditional medicine
  • ‘John Redmond’ cultivar
  • Flowers and fruits
  • Close-up of flowers

butchers-broom      
ruscus
arbusto de la familia de las liláceas que los carniceros usaban para barrer sus locales
butchers-broom      
ruscus
arbusto de la familia de las liláceas que los carniceros usaban para barrer sus locales
broomstick         
  • Making brooms, 2012
  • Nigerian opposition politicians holding brooms at a campaign rally
  • Sabbath]] on a broomstick
  • Video of a [[Japan]]ese construction worker cleaning up his construction site with a Japanese broom
CLEANING TOOL
Harry Potter/Broom; Broom (Harry Potter); Broomsticks; Whisk broom; Broom (tool); Brooms; Broom stick; Wicca/broom; Broom stail; Push broom; Venik; Bezem; Hard broom; 🧹; Broomstick; Venik (broom); Witch's broomstick
escoba
palo de escoba

Definition

broom
(brooms)
1.
A broom is a kind of brush with a long handle. You use a broom for sweeping the floor.
N-COUNT
2.
Broom is a wild bush with a lot of tiny yellow flowers.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipedia

Ruscus aculeatus

Ruscus aculeatus, known as butcher's-broom, is a low evergreen dioecious Eurasian shrub, with flat shoots known as cladodes that give the appearance of stiff, spine-tipped leaves. Small greenish flowers appear in spring, and are borne singly in the centre of the cladodes. The female flowers are followed by a red berry, and the seeds are bird-distributed, but the plant also spreads vegetatively by means of rhizomes. It is native to Eurasia and some northern parts of Africa. Ruscus aculeatus occurs in woodlands and hedgerows, where it is tolerant of deep shade, and also on coastal cliffs. Likely due to its attractive winter/spring color, Ruscus aculeatus has become a fairly common landscape plant. It is also widely planted in gardens, and has spread as a garden escapee in many areas outside its native range. The plant grows well in zones 7 to 9 on the USDA hardiness zone map.

The Latin specific epithet aculeatus means “prickly”.