wild angelica
— Noun
– English
~ European herb with compound leaves and white flowers; adventive on Cape Breton Island
Wild Bill Hickock
— Noun
– English
~ frontier marshal whose adventures have become legendary (1837-1876)
wild hydrangea
— Noun
– English
~ deciduous shrub with creamy white flower clusters; eastern United States
wild medlar tree
— Noun
– English
~ small deciduous tree of southern Africa having edible fruit
wild onion
— Noun
– English
~ any of various plants of the genus Allium with edible bulbs found growing wild
wild mustard
— Noun
– English
~ weedy Eurasian plant often a pest in grain fields
wild medlar
— Noun
– English
~ small deciduous tree of southern Africa having edible fruit
wild lily of the valley
— Noun
– English
~ North American evergreen with small pinkish bell-shaped flowers and oblong leaves used formerly for shinplasters
wild climbing hempweed
— Noun
– English
~ herb of tropical America having vanilla-scented flowers; climbs up trees
wild rice
— Noun
– English
~ grains of aquatic grass of North America
wild hollyhock
— Noun
– English
~ perennial purple-flowered wild mallow of western North America that is also cultivated
wild cinnamon
— Noun
– English
~ large evergreen shrub or small tree having white aromatic bark and leathery leaves and small purple to red flowers in terminal cymes
wild pink
— Noun
– English
~ a bog orchid with usually a solitary fragrant magenta pink blossom with a wide gaping corolla; Canada
wild sweet pea
— Noun
– English
~ perennial subshrub of eastern North America having downy leaves yellowish and rose flowers and; source of rotenone
wild plum
— Noun
– English
~ an uncultivated plum tree or shrub
wild spinach
— Noun
– English
~ leaves collected from the wild
wild horse
— Noun
– English
~ undomesticated or feral domestic horse
wild oats
— Noun
– English
~ any of various plants of the genus Uvularia having yellowish drooping bell-shaped flowers
wild quinine
— Noun
– English
~ stout perennial herb of the eastern United States with whitish flowers; leaves traditionally used by Catawba Indians to treat burns