amaranth

AM-uh-ranth

A plant of the genus Amaranthus — tall, often red or purple, with dense plume-like flower heads that hold their color long after the plant has died. Amaranth was a staple grain of the Aztecs, suppressed by the Spanish, and now rediscovered as one of the most nutritious and resilient food crops in the world. The word also means an imaginary flower that never fades.
Etymology
Greek: amarantos (unfading, immortal), from a- (not) + marainein (to wither). The flower that does not die.
*

Surprise Me With a Word