myrtle
noun
- type of plant
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈmɝtl̩/ / /ˈmɜːtl̩/ / [ˈmɝtɫ̩]
name
Etymology: After the plant, myrtle; used since the end of the 19th century.
- A female given name from English.
“Myrtle Hazard Lindsay walked up to the bust, and kissed its marble forehead, saying, "This is the face of my Guardian Angel!"”
“"My husband used to say that girls with flower names fade fast." It was Myrtle who said this one day, out of the blue, and for some reason it made them all go weak with laughter.”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English mirtille, from Old French mirtille, mirtile, from myrte, from Latin myrtillus, from myrtus + -illus, from Ancient Greek μύρτος (múrtos, “myrtle”).
- An evergreen shrub or small tree of the genus Myrtus, native to southern Europe and north Africa.
“In the Middle Ages pulverized myrtle leaves were applied to the body as a sexual stimulation.”
- Cyrilla species.
- A dark green shade that resembles the color of Myrtus leaves.