English
Etymology
From New Latin Phlox, from Ancient Greek φλόξ (phlóx, “flame”).
Pronunciation
Noun
phlox (countable and uncountable, plural phlox or phloxes)
- Any flowering plant of the genus Phlox.
Derived terms
Translations
plant of genus Phlox
- Arabic: قبس m (qabas)
- Armenian: բոցենի (hy) (bocʻeni)
- Azerbaijani: floks
- Belarusian: флёкс m (fljoks)
- Bulgarian: флокс m (floks)
- Catalan: flox m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 天藍繡球 / 天蓝绣球 (tiānlán xiùqiú)
- Czech: plamenka f
- Estonian: floks, leeklill
- Finnish: leimu (fi)
- French: phlox (fr) m
- Georgian: ფლოქსი (ploksi)
- German: Flammenblume f, Phlox m
- Hindi: फ्लॉक्स m (phlŏks), पटुआ (hi) (paṭuā)
- Ido: floxo (io)
- Italian: flox m
- Japanese: フロックス (furokkusu)
- Navajo: tsídiidą́ą́ʼ
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: floks m
- Nynorsk: floks m
- Persian: فلوکس (fa)
- Polish: floks (pl) m, płomyk (pl) m
- Romanian: flox (ro) m
- Russian: флокс (ru) m (floks)
- Samogitian: karklalis m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: фло̏кс m
- Roman: flȍks (sh) m
- Sorbian:
- Upper Sorbian: płomjenjowka f
- Spanish: flox m
- Swedish: flox c
- Tatar: ялкынчәчәк (yalkınçäçäk)
- Thai: ฟล็อกซ์ (flók)
- Ukrainian: флокс m (floks)
- Uzbek:
- Cyrillic: флокс (uz) (floks)
- Roman: floks
- West Frisian: floks c, hjerstsering c
|
Further reading