dandelion
DAN-duh-ly-un
A plant so common it has become invisible. Every part is useful — leaves for salad, roots for tea, flowers for wine — and every part is despised by the American lawn. The seed head is an engineering marvel: each seed carries its own parachute, calibrated to release at wind speeds that will carry it farthest.
Etymology
From French dent de lion (tooth of the lion), for the jagged shape of the leaves. The name dates to the 15th century.
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