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hen-and-chickens
[hen-uhn-chik-uhnz]
noun
plural
hens-and-chickensany of several succulent plants that grow in clusters or colonies formed by runners or offshoots, as those of the genera Echeveria and Sempervivum.
hen-and-chickens
noun
(functioning as singular or plural) any of several plants, such as the houseleek and ground ivy, that produce many offsets or runners
Word History and Origins
Origin of hen-and-chickens1
Example Sentences
On the uplands the grass would be strewn with buttercups, with hen-and-chickens, with black-centered yellow violets.
Owing to their habit of producing a circle of young plants around the parent, they are commonly called "hen-and-chickens."
Blooming somewhat earlier than the "hen-and-chickens," but in similar situations, the stonecrop often clothes rock-masses with beautiful color.
The sterile bracts of the daisy occasionally produce capitula, and give rise to the hen-and-chickens daisy.
This hen-and-chickens kind of thinking led the Germans into a disastrous war under the leadership of an articulate, power-mad Hitler.
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