Any of a number of plants that have flowers with yellowish petals and a dark centre.
有黄色花瓣和黑色花心植物
a slender tropical climber popular as an indoor or greenhouse plant (Thunbergia alata, family Acanthaceae).
a rudbeckia grown in gardens (Rudbeckia hirta and its hybrids, family Compositae).
Example sentencesExamples
Purple coneflower, black-eyed Susans, sedums and grasses should be left as they are; if they look particularly messy, plant a few stakes and tie the leaves up.
How I loved those fields of wildflowers - especially the black-eyed Susans with their huge black eye surrounded by delicate petals of gold.
Less invasive kinds, such as black-eyed Susan vine, can even weave themselves among other annuals and perennials, creating a wild look.
The blooms on this huge-flowered black-eyed Susan actually look better a few days after they've been in the vase.
He picked up his binoculars and they swayed over to the Rassaby garden, pink veils of roses tumbling over the fence, morning glories and orange nasturtiums tangled in black-eyed Susans.
Definition of black-eyed Susan in US English:
black-eyed Susan
nounˌblakˌīd ˈso͞ozən
Any of a number of plants that have flowers with yellowish petals and a dark center.
有黄色花瓣和黑色花心植物
a slender tropical climber, grown as a popular indoor or greenhouse plant (Thunbergia alata, family Acanthaceae)
a North American plant of the daisy family with bristly leaves and stems (Rudbeckia hirta and its hybrids, family Compositae)
Example sentencesExamples
Less invasive kinds, such as black-eyed Susan vine, can even weave themselves among other annuals and perennials, creating a wild look.
How I loved those fields of wildflowers - especially the black-eyed Susans with their huge black eye surrounded by delicate petals of gold.
The blooms on this huge-flowered black-eyed Susan actually look better a few days after they've been in the vase.
Purple coneflower, black-eyed Susans, sedums and grasses should be left as they are; if they look particularly messy, plant a few stakes and tie the leaves up.
He picked up his binoculars and they swayed over to the Rassaby garden, pink veils of roses tumbling over the fence, morning glories and orange nasturtiums tangled in black-eyed Susans.