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单词 pheasants eye
释义

pheasant's eyen.

Brit. /ˈfɛzntsʌɪ/, U.S. /ˈfɛzntsˌaɪ/
Forms:

α. 1700s– pheasant eye.

β. 1700s– pheasant's eye.

Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: pheasant n., eye n.1
Etymology: Originally < pheasant n. + eye n.1 In β forms < the genitive of pheasant n. + eye n.1Originally with reference to the darker centre or eye of the flowers. Compare pheasant-eyed adj. and partridge eye n.
1. Any of various garden pinks having flowers with a dark centre. Chiefly attributive in pheasant's eye pink. Now rare or historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > pinks or carnations
gillyflower1517
carnation1538
clove gillyflower1538
incarnation1538
William1538
pink1566
John1572
Indian eye1573
sops-in-wine1573
sweet John1573
sweet-william1573
tuft gillyflower1573
Colmenier1578
small honesty1578
tol-me-neer1578
London tuft1597
maidenly pink1597
mountain pink1597
clove-carnation1605
musk-gillyflower1607
London pride1629
pride of London1629
maiden pink1650
Indian pink1664
Spanish pink1664
pheasant's eye pink1718
flake1727
flame1727
picotee1727
old man's head1731
painted lady1731
piquet1731
China-pink1736
clove1746
wild pink1753
lime-wort1777
matted thrift1792
clove-pink1837
Cheddar Pink1843
Dianthus1849
bunch pink1857
perpetual-flowering carnation1861
cliff pink1863
meadow pink1866
musk carnation1866
Jack1873
wax-pink1891
Malmaison1892
grenadin1904
1718 R. Bradley New Improvem. Planting & Gardening: Pt. 2 (ed. 2) 89 The Pinks most commonly Cultivated in Gardens are the Red Double-Pink, the White Double-Pink, the Double-Phæasant-Eye-Pink, [etc.].
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. App. Pheasant's-eye Pink.
1792 J. Maddock Florist's Directory Introd. 15 The improved varieties of what were formerly called Pheasant Eyes, are the subject of that part of the following work where Pinks are treated of.
1824 J. C. Loudon Encycl. Gardening (ed. 2) iii. ii. 860 The pink is considered..to have proceeded from D. deltoides,..and the pheasant-eye pinks from D. plumarius.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. I. 398/1 In Britain the following [Dianthus species] occur:..D. plumarius, or Pheasant's Eye.
1989 Observer 25 June (Colour Suppl.) 53/3 By the end of the 18th century, pheasant's eyes had spawned the glamorous laced pinks.
2. In early use: the ornamental annual plant (and occasional cornfield weed) Adonis annua, having crimson flowers with a black centre. Later also (frequently with distinguishing word): any of various other members of the genus Adonis (family Ranunculaceae); esp. (more fully yellow pheasant's eye) the yellow-flowered perennial plant A. vernalis. Cf. Adonis n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > buttercup and allied flowers > delphinium or larkspur
red maytheeOE
brown maythec1450
lark's foota1500
red maidweed1548
consound1578
lark's claw1578
larkspur1578
ox-eye1578
red camomile1578
Adonis1597
lark-heel1597
lark's toes1597
monkshood1597
rose-a-ruby1597
delphinium1666
pheasant's eye1727
red Morocco1760
rocket larkspur1778
blue rocket larkspur1784
bee-larkspur1846
1727 J. Laurence New Syst. Agric. (Dublin ed.) 286/3 Annual Flowers from Seed... Pheasant's Eye.
1728 R. Bradley Dict. Botanicum Adonis-flower, or Pheasant's-eye, is Flos Adonis... It grows about half a Foot high, with fine cut Leaves, and Blossoms of a beautiful Scarlet Colour.
1777 W. Curtis Flora Londinensis I. Pl. 106 The Pheasant's eye..is one of those plants which are annually cried about our streets under the name of red Morocco.
1854 S. Thomson Wanderings among Wild Flowers (ed. 4) iii. 209 The pheasant's eye,..with its bright scarlet flowers.
1970 J. McPhee Crofter & Laird 41 We just go out for a wee walk and see the wild flowers... Daisies, celandines, sea pinks, heath orchis, pheasant's eyes, wild iris, whin, broom, meadow rue.
1992 Private Eye 13 Mar. 13/2 Familiar weeds such as cornflower, corn cockle, rough poppy, pheasant's eye and shepherd's needle were bordering on extinction until the Game Conservancy started introducing ‘headlands’ of farmer-free acres.
2001 Homestyle Apr. 58/2 The earliest perennial, yellow pheasant's eye, hugs the ground.
3. The narcissus Narcissus poeticus, which has a fragrant white flower with a flat, yellow, crimson-edged corona; esp. the variety N. poeticus var. recurvus, with strongly reflexed perianth segments. Now usually more fully pheasant's eye narcissus. Also called poet's narcissus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > daffodil and allied flowers > daffodil or narcissus
narcissusOE
daffodil1548
laus tibi1548
affodill1551
primrose peerless1578
narciss1586
jonquil1629
Spanish trumpet1664
hoop-petticoat1731
poet's narcissus?1786
poet's daffodil1798
Queen Anne's double jonquil1806
polyanthus narcissus1841
tazetta1847
sweet Nancy1848
polyanth narcissus1856
pheasant's eye1872
peerless primrose1884
Tenby daffodil1884
Queen Anne's daffodil1889
poetaz1906
1872 Routledge's Every Boy's Ann. May 362/2 The Pheasant's eye (Narcissus poeticus).
1889 Harper's Mag. Feb. 367/1 The daffodil, the ‘pheasant-eye’, and the ‘hoop-petticoat’ are all narcissuses.
1898 Westm. Gaz. 30 Aug. 2/1 The ‘pheasant's eye’ narcissus grows wild upon these vine~covered hill-sides.
1900 W. Robinson Eng. Flower Garden (ed. 8) 677/1 The form usually met with early in May is N. recurvus, the Pheasant's-eye of cottage gardens.
1914 F. E. Fritsch & E. J. Salisbury Introd. Study Plants xviii. 232 (caption) Pheasant's-eye Narcissus (tubular type), showing hypogyny and epigyny.
1963 W. Blunt Flowers & Village 8 Pheasant's Eye narcissi, for which I then paid ninepence a dozen, are now eight shillings.
1977 R. Genders Scented Flora of World 322/2 The old Pheasant Eye narcissus..was not introduced into Britain until after Waterloo.
1999 BBC Gardeners' World Apr. 56/2 Others [sc. spring bulbs] to try... Pheasant's eye narcissus, hoop petticoat daffodils and bluebells.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2005; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1718
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