ivy

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
ivy
    n 1: Old World vine with lobed evergreen leaves and black
         berrylike fruits [syn: {ivy}, {common ivy}, {English ivy},
         {Hedera helix}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Ivy \I"vy\, n.; pl. {Ivies}. [AS. [imac]fig; akin to OHG. ebawi,
   ebah, G. epheu.] (Bot.)
   A plant of the genus {Hedera} ({Hedera helix}), common in
   Europe. Its leaves are evergreen, dark, smooth, shining, and
   mostly five-pointed; the flowers yellowish and small; the
   berries black or yellow. The stem clings to walls and trees
   by rootlike fibers.
   [1913 Webster]

         Direct
         The clasping ivy where to climb.         --Milton.
   [1913 Webster]

         Ye myrtles brown, with ivy never sere.   --Milton.
   [1913 Webster]

   {American ivy}. (Bot.) See {Virginia creeper}.

   {English ivy} (Bot.), a popular name in America for the ivy
      proper ({Hedera helix}).

   {German ivy} (Bot.), a creeping plant, with smooth, succulent
      stems, and fleshy, light-green leaves; a species of
      {Senecio} ({Senecio scandens}).

   {Ground ivy}. (Bot.) Gill ({Nepeta Glechoma}).

   {Ivy bush}. (Bot.) See {Mountain laurel}, under {Mountain}.
      

   {Ivy owl} (Zool.), the barn owl.

   {Ivy tod} (Bot.), the ivy plant. --Tennyson.

   {Japanese ivy} (Bot.), a climbing plant ({Ampelopsis
      tricuspidata}), closely related to the Virginia creeper.
      

   {Poison ivy} (Bot.), an American woody creeper ({Rhus
      Toxicodendron}), with trifoliate leaves, and
      greenish-white berries. It is exceedingly poisonous to the
      touch for most persons.

   {To pipe in an ivy leaf}, to console one's self as best one
      can. [Obs.] --Chaucer.

   {West Indian ivy}, a climbing plant of the genus
      {Marcgravia}.
      [1913 Webster]
    
from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
IVY

   A language with a more pleasant syntax than {Perl}, {tcl} or
   {Lisp}.  It has nice features like low punctuation count,
   blocks indicated by indentation, and similarity to normal
   procedural languages.  This language started out as an idea
   for an extension language for the editor {JOE}.

   An experimental {interpreter} by Joseph H Allen
   <[email protected]> was posted to {alt.sources} on 28 Sep
   1993.
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
97 Moby Thesaurus words for "ivy":
      aestival, algae, autophyte, bean, beryl-green, berylline,
      blue-green, bluish-green, bracken, brown algae, chartreuse,
      chloranemic, chlorine, chlorotic, citrine, citrinous, climber,
      conferva, confervoid, creeper, diatom, emerald, fern, foliaged,
      fruits and vegetables, fucus, fungus, glaucescent, glaucous,
      glaucous-green, grapevine, grassy, green, green algae,
      green as grass, green-blue, greenish, greenish-blue,
      greenish-yellow, greensick, gulfweed, herb, heterophyte, holly,
      ivy-green, kelp, leafy, leaved, legume, lentil, liana, lichen,
      liverwort, mold, moss, mushroom, olivaceous, olive, olive-green,
      parasite, parasitic plant, pea, perthophyte, phytoplankton,
      planktonic algae, plant families, porraceous, puffball, pulse,
      red algae, rockweed, rust, saprophyte, sargasso, sargassum,
      sea lentil, sea moss, sea wrack, seaweed, smaragdine, smut,
      springlike, succulent, summerlike, summery, toadstool, verdant,
      verdurous, vernal, vernant, vert, vetch, vine, virescent, wort,
      wrack, yellowish-green

    

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