WordCmp.com

old man's beard vs epiphyte

epiphyte vs old man's beard

old man's beard and epiphyte both are nouns.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
old man's beard Yes No No No
epiphyte Yes No No No
As nouns, epiphyte is a hypernym of old man's beard; that is, epiphyte is a word with a broader meaning than old man's beard:
  • old man's beard: dense festoons of greenish-grey hairlike flexuous strands anchored to tree trunks and branches by sparse wiry roots; southeastern United States and West Indies to South America
  • epiphyte: plant that derives moisture and nutrients from the air and rain; usually grows on another plant but not parasitic on it
Other hypernyms of old man's beard include aerophyte, air plant, epiphytic plant.
old man's beard (noun) epiphyte (noun)
dense festoons of greenish-grey hairlike flexuous strands anchored to tree trunks and branches by sparse wiry roots; southeastern United States and West Indies to South America plant that derives moisture and nutrients from the air and rain; usually grows on another plant but not parasitic on it
common climber of eastern North America that sprawls over other plants and bears numerous panicles of small creamy white flowers
vigorous deciduous climber of Europe to Afghanistan and Lebanon having panicles of fragrant green-white flowers in summer and autumn
Difference between old man's beard and epiphyte

© WordCmp.com 2024, CC-BY 4.0 / CC-BY-SA 3.0.