The stylised flower BARBED and SEEDED only, unless "SLIPPED" and/or "LEAVED".
A hardy shrub with pink to red fragrant flowers "Rosa" spp. The flower petals with the bitter white heel removed may be crystallized or used for decoration, in salads, in fruit pies or as a general flavoring. The bright red rose hips, after dehairing, may be used in jams or pureé for use in sauces or to make a sweet syrup high in vitamin C.
A fragrant red, pink, yellow, or white flower that represents the single most important plant in perfumery since the advent of fragrances.
Apart from the flower, the term refers to the nozzle with fine holes put on the spout of a watering can.
any of many plants of the genus Rosa
a beautiful Chestnut yearling filly
a beautiful flower but if you bully it by picking it from the ground it could cut you open with it's thorns, as if it was fighting back at you for messing with it in the first place
a colorful and fragrant flower ( Rosa spp
a flower all covered in thorns Whose beauty is subtle and rare
a flower and a pigeon is a bird
a flower dedicated for lust
a flower I always liked ZPoint
a flower in the Rosaceae family
a flower is a resurrection is an erection is a momento is an Is
a flower" looks like truth but it is not
a flower or it is not a flower
a flower Sentence verifica
a mere flower if it has no thorns
a precious beauty to behold
a sign of beauty, but it's thorns are a sign of hurt and pain
An heraldic rose is a stylized flower, with five petals, seen head-on. Protruding from between each petal is a spiked leaf, called a barb. Toward the center of the flower there may be one, or more often, five, dots of a different tincture. The rose would then be seeded of that tincture.
GGNJ] A weight with a single flower, perhaps with a couple of leaves, made with a "crimp" that pushes petal shaped colored glass up into the clear, which is then worked to shape, encased, leaves added, and further encased. [MF] Modern flower weights often contain lampworked flowers, instead of crimped.
Available in a number of colors, rose buds appear at the end of a long, thorny stems. Roses vary in size from six inches across to the miniature variety whose bud is less than one inch across. Naturally, roses are a very popular and fragrant wedding flower. Summer is their season, but they are available year-round through florists.
Rose oil is also referred to as "otto" or "attar" of rose; these terms refer to perfume oil produced through distillation. There is a wide variety of roses, and the rich oil they produce has the familiar rose aroma, though undertones vary from honey to fruity, spicy to musk, and violet to green. Called the queen of flowers, it is one of the most precious ingredients in perfumery. Roses bloom just thirty days of the year and must be picked quickly, for they lose half their essence by noon. Centifolia and Damascena are popularly cultivated roses. The floral essence is used in rose water, floral, chypre and Oriental compositions. Rose water was said to have been a favorite of Marie Antoinette.
Greek mythology has an unusual tale to explain the origin of the rose. Rondanthe was a beautiful Greek maiden. So beautiful, in fact, that she was constantly followed by hopefull suitors. To no avail, Rodanthe had no interest in any of them and ignored them completely. So spellbound by her beauty, the young men could not help but relentlessly pursue her. The goddess Diana could not fail to notice the commotion that Rodanthe was creating. Diana was enraged by the folly of the young men, exasperated by the dismissive attitude of Rodanthe, and jealous that she herself was not the object of this attention. In her anger, Diana turned Rodanthe into a rose. The suitors who had so stung her with their slight, she turned into the rose's thorns. The Romans told a different story. Mourning the death of her beloved Adonis, Venus wept in a garden. As her tears fell they turned into beautiful white roses. Her son Cupid was in the garden when he was practicing shooting arrows. Suddenly he was stung by a bee. His shots went awry and stuck into the stems of roses, becoming the thorns. When Venus tore her foot on a thorn drops of blood fell and became red roses.
One of the main flower notes used in perfumery.
Rose is used to describe one of the most common notes in perfumery which, of course, comes from rose petals.
A rose is a flowering shrub of the genus Rosa, and the flower of this shrub. There are more than a hundred species of wild roses, all from the northern hemisphere and mostly from temperate regions. The species form a group of generally prickly shrubs or climbers, and sometimes trailing plants, reaching 2–5 m tall, rarely reaching as high as 20 m by climbing over other plants.
The Rose, which is popular in English heraldry, is generally borne singly and full-faced, with five petals, barbs and seeds. As a difference, or mark of distinction, the sixth (seventh?) brother of any family ought to bear it in his coat of arms.