'Hungarian grass' definitions:
Definition of 'Hungarian grass'
From: WordNet
noun
Coarse drought-resistant annual grass grown for grain, hay, and forage in Europe and Asia and chiefly for forage and hay in United States [syn: foxtail millet, Italian millet, Hungarian grass, Setaria italica]
Definition of 'Hungarian grass'
From: GCIDE
- Hungarian \Hun*ga"ri*an\, a. Of or pertaining to Hungary or to the people of Hungary. -- n. A native or one of the people of Hungary. [1913 Webster]
- Hungarian grass. See Italian millet, under Millet. [1913 Webster]
Definition of 'Hungarian grass'
From: GCIDE
- millet \mil"let\ (m[i^]l"l[e^]t), n. [F., dim. of mil, L. milium; akin to Gr. meli`nh, AS. mil.] (Bot.) The name of several cereal and forage grasses which bear an abundance of small roundish grains. The common millets of Germany and Southern Europe are Panicum miliaceum, and Setaria Italica.
- Note:
- Arabian millet is Sorghum Halepense.
- Egyptian millet or
- East Indian millet is Penicillaria spicata.
- Indian millet is Sorghum vulgare. (See under Indian.)
- Italian millet is Setaria Italica, a coarse, rank-growing annual grass, valuable for fodder when cut young, and bearing nutritive seeds; -- called also Hungarian grass.
- Texas millet is Panicum Texanum.
- Wild millet, or
- Millet grass, is Milium effusum, a tall grass growing in woods. [1913 Webster]