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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Jonquil

Jonquil \Jon"quil\, Jonquille \Jon"quille\, n. [F. jonquille, fr. L. juncus a rush, because it has rushlike leaves.] (Bot.) A bulbous plant of the genus Narcissus ( Narcissus Jonquilla), allied to the daffodil. It has long, rushlike leaves, and yellow or white fragrant flowers. The root has emetic properties. It is sometimes called the rush-leaved daffodil. See Illust. of Corona.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
jonquil

1660s, species of narcissus, from French jonquille (17c.), from Spanish junquillo, diminutive of junco "rush, reed," from Latin iuncus "rush;" so called in reference to its leaves. The type of canary bird (1865) is so called for its pale yellow color, which is like that of the flower.

Wiktionary
jonquil

n. 1 A fragrant bulb flower ((taxlink Narcissus jonquilla species noshow=1)), a species of daffodil. 2 A shade of yellow.

WordNet
jonquil
  1. n. widely cultivated ornamental plant native to southern Europe but naturalized elsewhere having fragrant yellow or white clustered flowers [syn: Narcissus jonquilla]

  2. often used colloquially for any yellow daffodil

Wikipedia
Jonquil (color)

Jonquil is a hue of yellow. It is the color of the interior of the central cylindrical tubular projection of the jonquil flower. The color takes its name from a species of plant, Narcissus jonquilla, which has clusters of small fragrant yellow flowers, and is native to the Mediterranean.

The first known recorded use of jonquil as a color name in English was in 1789.

Jonquil

Jonquil or Jonquille may refer to:

  • Narcissus jonquilla, the jonquil, a narcissus with clusters of small fragrant yellow flowers and cylindrical leaves, native to southern Europe and northeastern Africa
  • Jonquil (color), a hue named after the flower
  • USS Jonquil (1863), a 19th-century warship of the United States Navy

Usage examples of "jonquil".

The air was scented with green meadowgrass and purple jonquils, while patches of honeysuckle swarmed with the buzz of bees.

Wild flowers were scattered through the woods, white trilliums, yellow violets, rose pink hawthorn, while yellow jonquils and blue and yellow gentians dominated some of the higher meadows.

And they told him how they picked clothes-baskets full of the wild lily of the valley that grew upon the Boudry slopes, hepaticas, periwinkles, jonquils, blue and white violets, as well as countless anemones, and later, the big yellow marguerites.

He had placed his bouquet of jonquils and his carton of cakes and the bag containing his binder upon the wicker settee put out for sale on the sidewalk.

In the long grass, underneath, a wealth of daffodils, jonquils, and narcissus, came up year after year, and sunned their yellow stars in the light which dappled through the blossom.

He always wore a bouquet of the most strongly-smelling flowers, such as tuberoses, jonquils, and Spanish jasmine.

Ormer Bell writing screenplays with Jonquil Adams and Austin Carl, chatting with Hampton Drane on the phone, a regular rising star, and it could have been her, but she wasn't savvy enough, she wasn't something enough.

Judith could only be glad that she had chosen that morning to put on the jonquil muslin dress with the lace trimming, and the new kid shoes of celestial blue.

In Paris streets, on a March day, he comes across a flower in bloom, a jonquil.

Th’ very little ones are snowdrops an’ crocuses an’ th’ big ones are narcissuses an’ jonquils and daffydowndillys.

Th' very little ones are snowdrops an' crocuses an' th' big ones are narcissuses an' jonquils and daffydowndillys.

I'm currently writing an original screenplay for Jonquil that will really pack a punch.

Lilacs, peonies, and jonquils were arranged in showy springtime displays in tall cut-glass vases.