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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 21, 2010 is:
hawthorn \HAW-thorn\ noun
: any of a genus (Crataegus) of spring-flowering spiny shrubs or small trees of the rose family with glossy and often lobed leaves, white or pink fragrant flowers, and small red fruits
Examples:
Susan said that for her, one of the signs that spring had truly arrived was the flowering of the hawthorn.
Did you know?
A hawthorn is a thorny shrub or tree which can be planted into a hedge, and this fact provides a hint about the origins of the plant's name. The word "hawthorn" traces back to the Old English word "hagathorn," a combination of "haga" ("hedge") and "thorn" (same meaning as the modern "thorn" or "thornbush"). "Haga" was also used in Old English for the hawthorn itself, but by the 12th century the "thorn" had been added to its name.
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word a daywordsvocabularydictionarymerriam-websterenglishwordword of the daylanguagemerriamwebster