poppy
Plural: poppies
Noun
- A flowering plant, often with brightly colored petals.
- annual or biennial or perennial herbs having showy flowers
- Any plant of the genus Papaver or the family Papaveraceae, with crumpled, often red, petals and a milky juice having narcotic properties; especially a common poppy or corn poppy (Papaver rhoeas) which has orange-red flowers; the flower of such a plant.
- A bright red colour tinted with orange, like that of the common poppy flower.
- A simple artificial poppy flower worn in a buttonhole or displayed in other contexts to remember those who died in the two World Wars and other armed conflicts, especially around Remembrance Day/Remembrance Sunday.
- One's father or grandfather, or a male authority figure having similar standing.
Adj
- Of a bright red colour tinted with orange, like that of the common poppy flower (Papaver rhoeas).
- Having a popping or bursting sound.
- Of a beverage: resembling soda pop; effervescent, fizzy.
- Of eyes: protruding, sticking out.
- Popular.
- Typical of, or in the style of, pop music.
Examples
- He hoped to find a high-scoring word like POPPY, which offers good letter values.
Origin / Etymology
PIE word
*péh₂wr̥
The noun is derived from Late Middle English poppy, Middle English popy, popi, popie (“plant of the genus Papaver; poppy seeds used as a spice”) [and other forms], from Old English popiġ (“poppy”), Early Old English popeġ, popaeġ, popæġ, popei [and other forms], perhaps from Late Latin *papavum, popauer, from Latin papāver (“poppy”), which may be from a reduplication of Proto-Indo-European *péh₂wr̥ (“bonfire”). Doublet of papaver.
Sense 3 (“artificial poppy flower to remember those who died in the two World Wars and other armed conflicts”) reflects the efforts of American professor and humanitarian Moina Michael (1869–1944) to popularize the wearing of artificial poppies in remembrance of those who fought and died in World War I; she was inspired by the poem “In Flanders Fields” (1915) by the Canadian poet and soldier John McCrae (1872–1918): see the quotation.
The adjective is derived from the noun.
Scrabble Score: 14
poppy: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordpoppy: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
poppy: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary