| 释义 | 
		Definition of pennyroyal in English: pennyroyalnoun pɛnɪˈrɔɪəlˈpɛniˌrɔɪəl Either of two small-leaved plants of the mint family, used in herbal medicine. A creeping Eurasian plant (Mentha pulegium), and American pennyroyal (Hedeoma pulegioides), family Labiatae  Example sentencesExamples -  Herbal flea collars containing essential oils such as pennyroyal, eucalyptus and citronella can also prevent fleas and ticks from landing on your pet.
 -  This also is true of many herbal tablets, capsules and extracts, including black or blue cohosh, ephedra, dong quai, feverfew, juniper, pennyroyal, St. John's wort, rosemary and thuja.
 -  Some herbal treatments, such as citrus extracts or pennyroyal, can be toxic to pets and humans.
 -  Then there's pennyroyal, a name for the mint Menthe pulegium, once prized as a medicinal herb.
 -  Essential oils from allspice, basil, cedar, cinnamon, citronella, garlic, geranium, lavender, pennyroyal, peppermint, pine, rosemary, and thyme have been reported to have repellent properties.
 -  These include pennyroyal (fatal if ingested), tea tree, rosemary and eucalyptus oils.
 -  Mint, lemon balm, pennyroyal, chives, chamomile, mayflower, and summer savory are a few herbs perfectly suited to this microclimate.
 -  Safflower is simply a safe cooking oil, but pennyroyal is known to have potential abortive effects.
 -  For some reason it always showed up in the potted garden and it particularly liked rooming with the pennyroyal.
 -  Some herbs that repel fleas include: juniper, pennyroyal, citronella, eucalyptus, cedar and Canadian fleabane.
 
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: from Anglo-Norman French puliol (based on Latin pulegium 'thyme') + real 'royal'.    Definition of pennyroyal in US English: pennyroyalnounˈpenēˌroiəlˈpɛniˌrɔɪəl Either of two small-leaved plants of the mint family, used in herbal medicine. A creeping Eurasian plant (Mentha pulegium), and American pennyroyal (Hedeoma pulegioides), family Labiatae  Example sentencesExamples -  Safflower is simply a safe cooking oil, but pennyroyal is known to have potential abortive effects.
 -  For some reason it always showed up in the potted garden and it particularly liked rooming with the pennyroyal.
 -  This also is true of many herbal tablets, capsules and extracts, including black or blue cohosh, ephedra, dong quai, feverfew, juniper, pennyroyal, St. John's wort, rosemary and thuja.
 -  Some herbs that repel fleas include: juniper, pennyroyal, citronella, eucalyptus, cedar and Canadian fleabane.
 -  Essential oils from allspice, basil, cedar, cinnamon, citronella, garlic, geranium, lavender, pennyroyal, peppermint, pine, rosemary, and thyme have been reported to have repellent properties.
 -  Herbal flea collars containing essential oils such as pennyroyal, eucalyptus and citronella can also prevent fleas and ticks from landing on your pet.
 -  Then there's pennyroyal, a name for the mint Menthe pulegium, once prized as a medicinal herb.
 -  Mint, lemon balm, pennyroyal, chives, chamomile, mayflower, and summer savory are a few herbs perfectly suited to this microclimate.
 -  Some herbal treatments, such as citrus extracts or pennyroyal, can be toxic to pets and humans.
 -  These include pennyroyal (fatal if ingested), tea tree, rosemary and eucalyptus oils.
 
 
 Origin   Mid 16th century: from Anglo-Norman French puliol (based on Latin pulegium ‘thyme’) + real ‘royal’.     |