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shamrock
[sham-rok]
noun
any of several trifoliate plants, as the wood sorrel, Oxalis acetosella, or a small, pink-flowered clover, Trifolium repens minus, but especially Trifolium procumbens, a small, yellow-flowered clover: the national emblem of Ireland.
shamrock
/ ˈʃæˌɒ /
noun
a plant having leaves divided into three leaflets, variously identified as the wood sorrel, red clover, white clover, and black medick: the national emblem of Ireland
Word History and Origins
Origin of shamrock1
Word History and Origins
Origin of shamrock1
Example Sentences
“My first tattoo,” she wrote, “might just be a huge shamrock in the middle of my forehead.”
"It's impossible not to like Justin Rose. It's the English Rose against the Irish shamrock," said one golfer, as everyone chatted nervously before the play-off.
Catherine, dressed in a bottle-green and percher hat, presented the traditional sprigs of shamrock to officers, guardsmen and mascot Seamus, the Irish wolfhound, at the regiment's annual parade at Wellington Barracks.
But such information would only have puzzled Trump and complicated the shamrock bonhomie, and Vance — a Roman Catholic convert, after all — beamed in silence from the sofa.
On Wednesday, the taoiseach presented Trump with a bowl of shamrocks in the White House.
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