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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
camellia
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And listen up, fans of azaleas and camellias.
▪ And some species of lily and holly and camellia.
▪ He designs four Chanel collections a year, down to the smallest camellia petal and button.
▪ His photograph of two camellia brooches could just as easily have been a study of two bold flowers plucked from a garden.
▪ Mine is white and shaped like a flower, perhaps a camellia.
▪ Shrubs under siege Adult weevils particularly like camellias and rhododendrons, nibbling notches around the edges of leaves.
▪ Tubs, their ribs opening, held the corpses of camellias, their desperation for water manifest.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
camellia

camelia \camelia\ n. any of several shrubs or small evergreen trees having solitary white or pink or reddish flowers; the camellia.

Syn: camellia.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
camellia

1753, named by Linnæus from Latinized form of Georg Joseph Kamel (1661-1706), Moravian-born Jesuit who described the flora of the island of Luzon, + abstract noun ending -ia.\n

Wiktionary
camellia

n. Any plant of the genus ''Camellia'', shrubs and small trees native to Asia; ''Camellia japonica'' is the most popular as a garden plant; ''Camellia sinensis'' is the tea plant.

WordNet
camellia

n. any of several shrubs or small evergreen trees having solitary white or pink or reddish flowers [syn: camelia]

Wikipedia
Camellia

Camellia is a genus of flowering plants in the family Theaceae. They are found in eastern and southern Asia, from the Himalayas east to Japan and Indonesia. There are 100–300 described species, with some controversy over the exact number. There are also around 3,000 hybrids. The genus was named by Linnaeus after the Jesuit botanist Georg Joseph Kamel, who worked in the Philippines and described a species of camellia (although Linnaeus did not refer to Kamel's account when discussing the genus). Camellias are famous throughout East Asia; they are known as cháhuā (茶花) in Chinese, "tea flower", an apt designation, as tsubaki (椿) in Japanese, as dongbaek-kkot (동백꽃) in Korean and as hoa trà or hoa chè in Vietnamese.

Of economic importance in the Indian subcontinent and Asia, leaves of C. sinensis are processed to create the popular beverage, tea. The ornamental C. japonica, C. sasanqua and their hybrids are the source of hundreds of garden cultivars. C. oleifera produces tea seed oil, used in cooking.

Camellia (cipher)

In cryptography, Camellia is a symmetric key block cipher with a block size of 128 bits and key sizes of 128, 192 and 256 bits. It was jointly developed by Mitsubishi Electric and NTT of Japan. The cipher has been approved for use by the ISO/IEC, the European Union's NESSIE project and the Japanese CRYPTREC project. The cipher has security levels and processing abilities comparable to the Advanced Encryption Standard.

The cipher was designed to be suitable for both software and hardware implementations, from low-cost smart cards to high-speed network systems. It is part of the Transport Layer Security (TLS), cryptographic protocol designed to provide communications security over a computer network such as the internet.

Camellia (disambiguation)

Camellia may mean:

  • Camellia, a flower
  • Camellia City, a nickname for Sacramento, California
  • Camellia, New South Wales, a neighbourhood in Sydney, Australia
  • Camellia (poem), a poem by Rabindranath Tagore
  • Camellia (cipher), a block cipher
  • Camellia, a deimos that joins Darc and the pianta sage in Arc the Lad: Twilight of the Spirits.

Usage examples of "camellia".

Tim had always found himself especially attuned to the deserted charms of Candie Gardens in winter, enjoying the bare traceries of the trees and the widened harbour view, the few points of colour against the monochrome background - the red and pink of the camellias near the top gate, the hanging yellow bells of the winter-flowering abutilon with their red clappers, even the iridescence of the mallard drake circling the largest of the ponds with his speckled mate.

The front yard was rich green lawn worthy of Dublin, edged with beds of flowers-taller plantings of camellias, azaleas, hydrangeas, agapanthus, backing impatiens, begonia, and a white fringe of alyssum.

In Bradwell, Jane returned to her day school after the Easter holiday, Gerald continued to regard me with mute adoration, and spring flowers and shrubs began to bring great splashes of color to the green and brown gardens of Silverwood, first the daffodils, then the tulips, the aubrietia tumbling over dwarf walls, and the camellias with great blossoms of pink and red.

The large wooden mortar used to pound mochi at New Year and such occasions has been put aside there nearby to a camellia tree.

The minister had used the influence of his office to fill the garden with exotic specimens from the widest reaches of the empire: camellias, crimson-berried nandins, even a golden larch.

I battle that with pyracantha, the December-blooming camellias, and lots of holly in strategic places.

What the Camellia Buds ought to do is to turn the sorority into an Amalgamated Society of Fairy Godmothers, and each of us take over a junior to look after and act providence to.

The Camellia Buds had fixed the mischief so certainly on the rival sorority that they had never thought of the younger girls.

I turned from the river and hid among copperleaf trees and camellia bushes along the bank.

She had trimmed his sidelocks and rubbed fragrant camellia oil into his long black hair and was arranging it in a topknot.

And I had seen blossoming cherry trees on the way over here, and fields purple with clover, cultivated fields yellow with rape-blossoms, grown for its oil, a few winter camellias still holding forth their reds and pinks, the green shoots of rice beds, here and there a tulip tree dashed with white, blue mountains in the distance, foggy river valleys.

I had seen blossoming cherry trees on the way over here, and fields purple with clover, cultivated fields yellow with rape-blossoms, grown for its oil, a few winter camellias still holding forth their reds and pinks, the green shoots of rice beds, here and there a tulip tree dashed with white, blue mountains in the distance, foggy river valleys.

There he saw dazzling camellias expanding themselves, with flowers which were giving forth their last colours and perfumes, not on bushes, but on trees, and within bamboo enclosures, cherry, plum, and apple trees, which the Japanese cultivate rather for their blossoms than their fruit, and which queerly-fashioned, grinning scarecrows protected from the sparrows, pigeons, ravens, and other voracious birds.

He stopped the car beside a hedge of stunted camellias struggling under a ragged mantle of wild fox-grape vines.

She had seen herself as the lady of the camellias from La Traviata: all champagne, diamonds, and beautiful clothes, with a little elegantly passionate sex thrown in.