hyssop in English

noun
1
a small bushy aromatic plant of the mint family, the bitter minty leaves of which are used in cooking and herbal medicine.
Herbs you can use in the bath are bay leaf, chamomile, hyssop , lemon balm and lime flowers.
2
(in biblical use) a wild shrub of uncertain identity whose twigs were used for sprinkling in ancient Jewish rites of purification.
The hyssop is a lowly shrub; and God must stoop low to smell the incense of Calvary.

Use "hyssop" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hyssop" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hyssop", or refer to the context using the word "hyssop" in the English Dictionary.

1. Black Salsify, Coltsfoot, Yellow Pond Lily, Mexican Hyssop, Carambola, Baobob, Kapok, Durian, Italian Bugloss, Blueweed Edible plants collect a lot of names

2. Bractless hedge-hyssop ( Gratiola ebracteata ) is a small annual plant which resembles the American Brooklime with its lance-shaped leaves, and occupies similar

3. + 6 And the priest will take cedarwood, hyssop,+ and scarlet material and throw them into the fire where the cow is being burned.

4. Emerging Catmint Foliage This herbaceous perennial is a member of the mint family (Lamiaceae), which includes lavender, rosemary, thyme, bee balm and giant hyssop

5. + 52 And he will purify the house from uncleanness* with the blood of the bird, the running water, the live bird, the cedarwood, the hyssop, and the scarlet material.

6. 6 But he should take the living bird along with the cedarwood, the scarlet material, and the hyssop, and dip them together in the blood of the bird that was killed over the running water.

7. Absinthe has an opaque green color with a licorice aroma and a high alcohol content, typically containing anise, artemesia pontica, melissa, fennel, hyssop and lemonbalm; some immitation Absinthes contain the original controversial ingredient wormwood, which contains the neurotoxin thujone

8. Several double-blind trials have found that echinacea root tinctures in combination with Boneset, wild indigo, and homeopathic arnica reduce symptoms of the common cold.In addition, linden and hyssop may promote a healthy fever and the immune system's ability to fight infections.

9. Related to Budded: hyssop bud, in lower plants and animals, a protuberance from which a new organism or limb develops; in seed plants, a miniaturized twig bearing compressed rudimentary lateral stems (branches), leaves, or flowers, or all three, and protected in cold climates by overlapping bud scales.

10. The Bible says: “He would speak about the trees, from the cedar that is in Lebanon to the hyssop that is coming forth on the wall; and he would speak about the beasts and about the flying creatures and about the moving things and about the fishes.”

11. Much of that wisdom concerned Jehovah’s creation: “[Solomon] would speak about the trees, from the cedar that is in Lebanon to the hyssop that is coming forth on the wall; and he would speak about the beasts and about the flying creatures and about the moving things and about the fishes.”

12. ‘The purging of the sinful soul with hyssop, depicted by acciaccaturas and augmented seconds, leads into a lively, haunting dance as the broken bones of the text ` daunce Awaie their sadness’.’ ‘A third, subordinate motif is stated in bare octaves answered by bird-like pianissimo acciaccaturas in the treble (precursors of Bartók's

13. ‘The purging of the sinful soul with hyssop, depicted by acciaccaturas and augmented seconds, leads into a lively, haunting dance as the broken bones of the text ` daunce Awaie their sadness’.’ ‘A third, subordinate motif is stated in bare octaves answered by bird-like pianissimo acciaccaturas in the treble (precursors of Bartók's

14. angelica (Angelica spp.), belladonna (Atropa spp.), camomile (Matricaria spp.), cumin (Carum spp.), digitalis (Digitalis spp.), gentian (Gentiana spp.), hyssop (Hyssopus spp.), jasmine (Jasminum spp.), lavender and lavandin (Lavandula spp.), marjoram (Origanum spp.), melissa (Melissa spp.), mint (Mentha spp.), poppy (Papaver spp.), periwinkle (Vinca spp.), psyllium (seed) (Psyllium spp.), saffron (Curcuma spp.), sage (Salvia spp.), marigold (Calendula spp.), valerian (Valeriana spp.), etc.