: any of a genus (Magnolia of the family Magnoliaceae, the magnolia family) of American and Asian shrubs and trees with entire evergreen or deciduous leaves and usually showy white, yellow, rose, or purple flowers usually appearing in early spring
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Pay particularly close attention to magnolias, hollies, and other plants with thick, leathery leaves.—Neil Sperry, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 11 July 2025 As a lover of produce and playfulness, Deutsch said the current menu is inspired by early spring, with flavors like honey, beeswax, corn, lavender, strawberry magnolia, and black walnut.—Amanda Hancock, The Courier-Journal, 2 July 2025 There is a window in early spring to treat magnolia scale with dormant oil that is environmentally safe and another window in summer to treat adult insects with an insecticide.—Tim Johnson, Chicago Tribune, 14 June 2025 In the meantime, Earley said, the magnolia tree will be replaced, but not the bench.—Ashley MacKin Solomon, San Diego Union-Tribune, 2 June 2025 See All Example Sentences for magnolia
Word History
Etymology
New Latin, from Pierre Magnol †1715 French botanist
: any of a genus of North American and Asian trees or tall shrubs having usually showy white, yellow, rose, or purple flowers that appear before or sometimes with the leaves in the spring
capitalized: a genus (family Magnoliaceae, the magnolia family) of North American and Asian shrubs and trees including some whose bark has been used especially as a bitter tonic and diaphoretic in folk medicine
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