sweet violet
— Noun
– English
~ European violet typically having purple to white flowers; widely naturalized
two-eyed violet
— Noun
– English
~ violet of Pacific coast of North America having white petals tinged with yellow and deep violet
violet suksdorfia
— Noun
– English
~ slender delicate plant with wide roundish deeply lobed leaves and deep pink to violet funnel-shaped flowers; British Columbia to northern Oregon and west to Idaho and Montana
violet-flowered petunia
— Noun
– English
~ herb or small shrublet having solitary violet to rose-red flowers
violet family
— Noun
– English
~ a family of order Parietales including the genera Viola, Hybanthus, Hymenanthera, Melicytus
violet
— Noun
– English
~ any of numerous low-growing violas with small flowers
violet
— Noun
– English
~ a variable color that lies beyond blue in the spectrum
shrinking violet
— Noun
– English
~ someone who shrinks from familiarity with others
heath violet
— Noun
– English
~ Old World leafy-stemmed blue-flowered violet
hedge violet
— Noun
– English
~ common European violet that grows in woods and hedgerows
dog violet
— Noun
– English
~ Old World leafy-stemmed blue-flowered violet
horned violet
— Noun
– English
~ European viola with an unusually long corolla spur
English violet
— Noun
– English
~ European violet typically having purple to white flowers; widely naturalized
garden violet
— Noun
– English
~ European violet typically having purple to white flowers; widely naturalized
gentian violet
— Noun
– English
~ a green crystal (violet in water) used as a dye or stain or bactericide or fungicide or anthelmintic or burn treatment
African violet
— Noun
– English
~ tropical African plant cultivated as a houseplant for its violet or white or pink flowers
American dog violet
— Noun
– English
~ violet of eastern North America having pale violet to white flowers
bird's-foot violet
— Noun
– English
~ common violet of the eastern United States with large pale blue or purple flowers resembling pansies