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Answer for the clue "Weed, crushed, smells oddly ", 9 letters:
groundsel

Alternative clues for the word groundsel

Word definitions for groundsel in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. Any of several widely-distributed plants, of the genus ''Senecio'', having yellow, daisylike flowers. Etymology 2 n. (alternative form of groundsill English)

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Groundsel \Ground"sel\, n. [OE. grundswilie, AS. grundeswylige, grundeswelge, earlier gundiswilge; gund matter, pus + swelgan to swallow. So named as being good for a running from the eye. See Swallow , v.] (Bot.) An annual composite plant ( Senecio vulgaris ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. Eurasian weed with heads of small yellow flowers [syn: Senecio vulgaris ]

Usage examples of groundsel.

Brown Indian pipes, swamp violets, groundsel, bloodweed, wind apples, and ice-clear stalks of kiutl hung from thick, well-seasoned rafters.

The low sun illuminated occasional clumps of spiky grass, but most of the vegetation seemed to be groundsels shaped like huge cabbages, and giant lobelias whose shaggy flower columns stood taller than a man.

The groundsels grew within a few feet of the water, though the lobelias seemed to be less resistant to salt.

Butamo walked up a steep rocky grade for perhaps one hundred yards, then found his path blocked by a grove of giant groundsels and circled to his left to avoid them.

Yet the red and black cinnabar moth has caterpillars which, while they are happy to eat innocuous weeds such as groundsel, are also ragwort specialists.

Senecio aureus, Golden Groundsel, an American species, native of Virginia and Canada, is considered a most useful plant, deserving of attention.

All forms of this genus are not of such beneficial use, and one at least has lately been found to be distinctly harmful, for Molteno disease, a cattle and horse disease prevalent in certain parts of South Africa, has been definitely traced to the presence of a poisonous alkaloid in a plant eaten by the animals, this plant being Senecio latifolius, a near relative of the Common Groundsel of this country.

Several plants have been named Chickweed, one of them a plant belonging to the Purslane family and four species of Cerastium -the Mouse Ear Chickweeds - but the name especially belongs to the plant in question, Stellaria media, the ubiquitous garden weed, of which our caged birds are as fond as they are of Groundsel, a taste shared by young chickens, to whose diet it makes a wholesome addition.

There ere no bellflowers, rampions, worts, groundsels, daisies, lilies, saxi aees, pinks, monkshoods, or beautiful little edelweiss to ease the fcter cold monotony of the freezing fields of winter.