pea : Idioms & Phrases


angola pea

An*go"la pea`
Definitions
  1. (Bot.) A tropical plant (Cajanus indicus) and its edible seed, a kind of pulse; -- so called from Angola in Western Africa. Called also pigeon pea and Congo pea.
Webster 1913

asparagus pea

  • noun sprawling European annual having a 4-winged edible pod
    Lotus tetragonolobus; asparagus pea.
WordNet

australian pea

  • noun South African evergreen partly woody vine grown for its clusters of rosy purple flowers followed by edible pods like snap beans; also grown as green manure; sometimes placed in genus Dolichos
    Dipogon lignosus; Dolichos lignosus.
WordNet

austrian winter pea

  • noun variety of pea plant native to the Mediterranean region and North Africa and widely grown especially for forage
    Pisum sativum arvense; field pea; Pisum arvense; Austrian winter pea.
WordNet

Beach pea

  • noun wild pea of seashores of north temperate zone having tough roots and purple flowers and useful as a sand binder
    beach pea; Lathyrus maritimus; Lathyrus japonicus.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), a seashore plant, Lathyrus maritimus.
Webster 1913

bitter pea

  • noun any of several spiny shrubs of the genus Daviesia having yellow flowers and triangular seeds; Australia
WordNet

black pea

  • noun perennial of Europe and North Africa; foliage turns black in drying
    Lathyrus niger.
WordNet

Black-eyed pea

  • noun fruit or seed of the cowpea plant
    cowpea.
  • noun sprawling Old World annual cultivated especially in southern United States for food and forage and green manure
    Vigna sinensis; cowpea plant; Vigna unguiculata; cowpea.
  • noun eaten fresh as shell beans or dried
    cowpea.
WordNet
  • a West Indian name for Dolichos sphærospermus and its seed.
Webster 1913

blue pea

  • noun vine of tropical Asia having pinnate leaves and bright blue flowers with yellow centers
    Clitoria turnatea; blue pea.
WordNet

broad-leaved everlasting pea

  • noun perennial climber of central and southern Europe having purple or pink or white flowers; naturalized in North America
    broad-leaved everlasting pea; Lathyrus latifolius.
WordNet

Bush pea

  • noun any of various plants of the genus Thermopsis having trifoliate leaves and yellow or purple racemose flowers
WordNet
  • (Bot.), a variety of pea that needs to be bushed.
Webster 1913

Butterfly pea

  • noun vine of tropical Asia having pinnate leaves and bright blue flowers with yellow centers
    Clitoria turnatea; blue pea.
  • noun large-flowered wild twining vine of southeastern and central United States having pale blue flowers
    Clitoria mariana.
  • noun large-flowered weakly twining or prostrate vine of New Jersey to tropical eastern North America, sometimes cultivated for its purple and white flowers
    Centrosema virginianum.
WordNet
  • the American plant Clitoria Mariana, having showy blossoms.
Webster 1913

cajan pea

  • noun tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics
    red gram; dahl; dhal; Cajanus cajan; cajan pea; catjang pea; pigeon pea.
  • noun small highly nutritious seed of the tropical pigeon-pea plant
    cajan pea; dahl.
WordNet

caley pea

  • noun a weak-stemmed winter annual native to Mediterranean region for long established in southern United States; cultivated as a cover and pasture crop
    wild winterpea; Caley pea; rough pea; Lathyrus hirsutus.
WordNet

calnada pea

  • noun common perennial climber of temperate regions of Eurasia and North America having dense elongate clusters of flowers
    Vicia cracca; tufted vetch; bird vetch.
WordNet

catjang pea

  • noun tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics
    red gram; dahl; dhal; Cajanus cajan; cajan pea; catjang pea; pigeon pea.
WordNet

chaparral pea

  • noun spiny evergreen xerophytic shrub having showy rose and purple flowers and forming dense thickets; of dry rocky mountain slopes of California
    Pickeringia montana; stingaree-bush.
WordNet

Chick pea

  • . See Chick-pea.
Webster 1913

chick-pea

Chick"-pea` noun
Etymology
See Chich.
Definitions
  1. (Bot.) A Small leguminous plant (Cicer arietinum) of Asia, Africa, and the sounth of Europe; the chick; the dwarf pea; the gram.
  2. Its nutritious seed, used in cookery, and especially, when roasted (parched pulse), as food for travelers in the Eastern deserts.
Webster 1913

chinese pea tree

  • noun shrub with dark-green glossy foliage and solitary pale yellow flowers; northern China
    Caragana sinica.
WordNet

cich-pea

Cich"-pea` noun
Definitions
  1. The chick-pea. Holland.
Webster 1913

common flat pea

  • noun low spreading evergreen shrub of southern Australia having triangular to somewhat heart-shaped foliage and orange-yellow flowers followed by flat winged pods
    Playlobium obtusangulum; native holly.
WordNet

common pea

  • noun plant producing peas usually eaten fresh rather than dried
    Pisum sativum; garden pea; common pea.
WordNet

coral pea

  • noun any of various Australian climbing plants of the genus Kennedia having scarlet flowers
WordNet

darling pea

  • noun either of two Australian plants of the genus Swainsona that are poisonous to sheep
    poison bush.
WordNet

desert pea

  • noun sprawling shrubby perennial noted for its scarlet black-marked flowers; widely distributed in dry parts of Australia
    desert pea; Clianthus formosus; Clianthus speciosus; Sturt pea.
WordNet

earth-nut pea

  • noun European herb bearing small tubers used for food and in Scotland to flavor whiskey
    earth-nut pea; tuberous vetch; earthnut pea; Lathyrus tuberosus.
WordNet

earthnut pea

  • noun European herb bearing small tubers used for food and in Scotland to flavor whiskey
    earth-nut pea; tuberous vetch; earthnut pea; Lathyrus tuberosus.
WordNet

edible-pod pea

  • noun a variety of pea plant producing peas having soft thick edible pods lacking the fibrous inner lining of the common pea
    edible-pod pea; Pisum sativum macrocarpon.
WordNet

edible-podded pea

  • noun a variety of pea plant producing peas having soft thick edible pods lacking the fibrous inner lining of the common pea
    edible-pod pea; Pisum sativum macrocarpon.
WordNet

Egyptian pea

  • noun Asiatic herb cultivated for its short pods with one or two edible seeds
    chickpea; Cicer arietinum; chickpea plant.
WordNet
  • . Same as Chick-pea.
Webster 1913

Everlasting pea

  • noun any of several perennial vines of the genus Lathyrus
WordNet
  • an ornamental plant (Lathyrus latifolius) related to the pea; so called because it is perennial.
Webster 1913

field pea

  • noun seed of the field pea plant
  • noun variety of pea plant native to the Mediterranean region and North Africa and widely grown especially for forage
    Pisum sativum arvense; field pea; Pisum arvense; Austrian winter pea.
  • noun coarse small-seeded pea often used as food when young and tender
WordNet

field-pea plant

  • noun variety of pea plant native to the Mediterranean region and North Africa and widely grown especially for forage
    Pisum sativum arvense; field pea; Pisum arvense; Austrian winter pea.
WordNet

flame pea

  • noun any of several small shrubs or twining vines having entire or lobed leaves and racemes of yellow to orange-red flowers; Australia
WordNet

flat pea

  • noun evergreen shrub having almost heart-shaped foliage and bright yellow pea-like flowers followed by flat pods with flat wings; Australia and Tasmania
    Platylobium formosum.
  • noun European perennial with mottled flowers of purple and pink; sometimes cultivated for fodder or as green manure
    Lathyrus sylvestris; flat pea.
WordNet

garden pea

  • noun the flattened to cylindric inflated multi-seeded fruit of the common pea plant
  • noun plant producing peas usually eaten fresh rather than dried
    Pisum sativum; garden pea; common pea.
  • noun fresh pea
    garden pea.
WordNet

garden pea plant

  • noun plant producing peas usually eaten fresh rather than dried
    Pisum sativum; garden pea; common pea.
WordNet

Glory pea

  • noun any of various shrubs or vines of the genus Clianthus having compound leaves and pea-like red flowers in drooping racemes
    clianthus.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), the name of two leguminous plants (Clianthus Dampieri and C. puniceus) of Australia and New Zeland. They have showy scarlet or crimson flowers.
Webster 1913

golden pea

  • noun western United States bushy herb having yellow pea-like flowers
    Thermopsis macrophylla; golden pea; false lupine.
WordNet

goober pea

  • noun pod of the peanut vine containing usually 2 nuts or seeds; `groundnut' and `monkey nut' are British terms
    goober; peanut; monkey nut; earthnut; groundnut.
WordNet

grass pea

  • noun European annual grown for forage; seeds used for food in India and for stock elsewhere
    grass pea; Lathyrus sativus; khesari.
WordNet

green pea

  • noun fresh pea
    garden pea.
WordNet

green pea soup

  • noun made of fresh green peas and stock with shredded lettuce onion and celery
    potage St. Germain.
WordNet

hairy darling pea

  • noun shrubby perennial of southern Australia having downy or woolly stems and undersides of leaves and racemes of red to pink flowers
    Swainsona grandiflora; Swainsona greyana.
WordNet

heart pea

  • noun woody perennial climbing plant with large ornamental seed pods that resemble balloons; tropical India and Africa and America
    balloon vine; Cardiospermum halicacabum.
WordNet

Heath pea

  • noun European herb bearing small tubers used for food and in Scotland to flavor whiskey
    earth-nut pea; tuberous vetch; earthnut pea; Lathyrus tuberosus.
WordNet
  • (bot.), a species of bitter vetch (Lathyris macrorhizus), the tubers of which are eaten, and in Scotland are used to flavor whisky.
Webster 1913

Hoary pea

  • noun a plant of the genus Tephrosia having pinnate leaves and white or purplish flowers and flat hairy pods
WordNet
  • any plant of the genus Tephrosia; goat's rue.
Webster 1913

indian pea

  • noun European annual grown for forage; seeds used for food in India and for stock elsewhere
    grass pea; Lathyrus sativus; khesari.
WordNet

Issue pea

  • a pea, or a similar round body, used to maintain irritation in a wound, and promote the secretion and discharge of pus.
Webster 1913

Issue pea, Orris pea

  • . (Med.) See under Issue, and Orris.
Webster 1913

Japan clover, ∨ Japan pea

  • (Bot.), a cloverlike plant (Lespedeza striata) from Eastern Asia, useful for fodder, first noticed in the Southern United States about 1860, but now become very common. During the Civil War it was called variously Yankee clover and Rebel clover.
Webster 1913

marrowfat pea

  • noun a variety of large pea that is commonly processed and sold in cans
WordNet

marsh pea

  • noun scrambling perennial of damp or marshy areas of Eurasia and North America with purplish flowers
    Lathyrus palustris.
WordNet

meadow pea

  • noun scrambling perennial Eurasian wild pea having yellowish flowers and compressed seed pods; cultivated for forage
    yellow vetchling; Lathyrus pratensis; common vetchling.
WordNet

Milk pea

  • (Bot.), a genus (Galactia) of leguminous and, usually, twining plants.
Webster 1913

mushy peas

  • noun marrowfat peas that have been soaked overnight and then boiled; served with fish and chips
WordNet

narrow-leaved everlasting pea

  • noun European perennial with mottled flowers of purple and pink; sometimes cultivated for fodder or as green manure
    Lathyrus sylvestris; flat pea.
WordNet

Orris pea

  • (Med.), an issue pea made from orris root.
Webster 1913

Partridge pea

  • noun tropical American plant having leaflets somewhat sensitive to the touch; sometimes placed in genus Cassia
    Cassia fasciculata; partridge pea; Chamaecrista fasciculata; wild sensitive plant.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), a yellow-flowered leguminous herb (Cassia Chamæcrista), common in sandy fields in the Eastern United States.
Webster 1913

pea bean

  • noun white-seeded bean; usually dried
    navy bean; white bean.
WordNet

Pea berry

  • a kind of a coffee bean or grain which grows single, and is round or pea-shaped; often used adjectively; as, pea-berry coffee.
Webster 1913

Pea bug

  • . (Zoöl.) Same as Pea weevil.
Webster 1913

Pea coal

  • a size of coal smaller than nut coal.
Webster 1913

Pea crab

  • noun tiny soft-bodied crab living commensally in the mantles of certain bivalve mollusks
WordNet
  • (Zoöl.), any small crab of the genus Pinnotheres, living as a commensal in bivalves; esp., the European species (P. pisum) which lives in the common mussel and the cockle.
Webster 1913

Pea dove

  • (Zoöl.), the American ground dove.
Webster 1913

pea family

  • noun a large family of trees, shrubs, vines, and herbs bearing bean pods; divided for convenience into the subfamilies Caesalpiniaceae; Mimosaceae; Papilionaceae
    legume family; Leguminosae; family Fabaceae; family Leguminosae; Fabaceae.
WordNet

pea flour

  • noun meal made from dried peas
WordNet

pea green

  • noun a shade of green tinged with yellow
    yellow green; chartreuse; yellowish green; Paris green.
WordNet

pea jacket

  • noun a sailor's heavy woolen double-breasted jacket
    peacoat.
WordNet

Pea maggot

  • (Zoöl.), the larva of a European moth (Tortrix pisi), which is very destructive to peas.
Webster 1913

Pea ore

  • (Min.), argillaceous oxide of iron, occurring in round grains of a size of a pea; pisolitic ore.
Webster 1913

pea plant

  • noun a leguminous plant of the genus Pisum with small white flowers and long green pods containing edible green seeds
    pea.
WordNet

pea pod

  • noun husk of a pea; edible in some garden peas
    peasecod.
WordNet

pea shooter

  • noun a straight narrow tube through which pellets (as dried peas) can be blown at a target
WordNet

pea soup

  • noun a thick soup made of dried peas (usually made into a puree)
  • noun a heavy thick yellow fog
    pea soup.
WordNet

Pea starch

  • the starch or flour of the common pea, which is sometimes used in adulterating wheat flour, pepper, etc.
Webster 1913

Pea tree

  • noun any plant of the genus Caragana having even-pinnate leaves and mostly yellow flowers followed by seeds in a linear pod
    caragana.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), the name of several leguminous shrubs of the genus Caragana, natives of Siberia and China.
Webster 1913

Pea vine

  • . (Bot.) (a) Any plant which bears peas . (b) A kind of vetch or tare, common in the United States (Lathyrus Americana, and other similar species).
Webster 1913

Pea weevil

  • noun larvae live in and feed on seeds of the pea plant
    Bruchus pisorum.
WordNet
  • (Zoöl.), a small weevil (Bruchus pisi) which destroys peas by eating out the interior.
Webster 1913

pea-chick

  • noun a young peafowl
    peachick.
WordNet

Pea-flower tribe

  • (Bot.), a suborder (Papilionaceæ) of leguminous plants having blossoms essentially like that of the pea. G. Bentham.
Webster 1913

pea-green

  • adjective satellite of a moderate slightly yellowish-green color
WordNet

pea-jacket

Pea"-jack`et noun
Etymology
Prob. fr. D. pij, pije, a coat of a coarse woolen stuff.
Definitions
  1. A thick loose woolen jacket, or coat, much worn by sailors in cold weather.
Webster 1913

pea-souper

  • noun a heavy thick yellow fog
    pea soup.
WordNet

pease pudding

  • noun a pudding made with strained split peas mixed with egg
WordNet

perennial pea

  • noun perennial climber of central and southern Europe having purple or pink or white flowers; naturalized in North America
    broad-leaved everlasting pea; Lathyrus latifolius.
WordNet

Pigeon pea

  • noun tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics
    red gram; dahl; dhal; Cajanus cajan; cajan pea; catjang pea; pigeon pea.
  • noun small highly nutritious seed of the tropical pigeon-pea plant
    cajan pea; dahl.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), the seed of Cajanus Indicus; a kind of pulse used for food in the East and West Indies; also, the plant itself.
  • . (Bot.) See Pigeon pea.
Webster 1913

pigeon-pea plant

  • noun tropical woody herb with showy yellow flowers and flat pods; much cultivated in the tropics
    red gram; dahl; dhal; Cajanus cajan; cajan pea; catjang pea; pigeon pea.
WordNet

poison pea

  • noun any of various Australian evergreen shrubs of the genus Gastrolobium having whorled compound leaves poisonous to livestock and showy yellow to deep reddish-orange flowers followed by two-seeded pods
    poison bush; gastrolobium.
WordNet

purple pea

  • noun any of several attractive evergreen shrubs of Australia grown for their glossy deep green foliage and flowers in rich blues and intense violets
    hovea.
WordNet

rough pea

  • noun a weak-stemmed winter annual native to Mediterranean region for long established in southern United States; cultivated as a cover and pasture crop
    wild winterpea; Caley pea; rough pea; Lathyrus hirsutus.
WordNet

sea pea

  • noun wild pea of seashores of north temperate zone having tough roots and purple flowers and useful as a sand binder
    beach pea; Lathyrus maritimus; Lathyrus japonicus.
WordNet

sensitive pea

  • noun tropical American plant having leaflets somewhat sensitive to the touch; sometimes placed in genus Cassia
    Cassia fasciculata; partridge pea; Chamaecrista fasciculata; wild sensitive plant.
WordNet

shamrock pea

  • noun trailing trifoliate Asiatic and African herb having cobalt blue flowers
    Parochetus communis.
WordNet

Siberian pea tree

  • noun large spiny shrub of eastern Asia having clusters of yellow flowers; often cultivated in shelterbelts and hedges
    Caragana arborescens.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), a small leguminous tree (Cragana arborescens) with yellow flowers. It is a native of Siberia.
Webster 1913

singletary pea

  • noun a weak-stemmed winter annual native to Mediterranean region for long established in southern United States; cultivated as a cover and pasture crop
    wild winterpea; Caley pea; rough pea; Lathyrus hirsutus.
WordNet

smooth darling pea

  • noun erect or trailing perennial of eastern Australia having axillary racemes of blue to purple or red flowers
    Swainsona galegifolia.
WordNet

snap pea

  • noun variety of pea plant producing peas having crisp rounded edible pods
    snap pea.
WordNet

snow pea

  • noun variety of pea plant producing peas having thin flat edible pods
    snow pea.
  • noun green peas with flat edible pods
    snow pea.
WordNet

Split pease

  • hulled pease split for making soup, etc.
Webster 1913

split-pea

  • noun dried hulled pea; used in soup
WordNet

split-pea soup

  • noun made of stock and split peas with onions carrots and celery
WordNet

sturt pea

  • noun sprawling shrubby perennial noted for its scarlet black-marked flowers; widely distributed in dry parts of Australia
    desert pea; Clianthus formosus; Clianthus speciosus; Sturt pea.
WordNet

sturt's desert pea

  • noun sprawling shrubby perennial noted for its scarlet black-marked flowers; widely distributed in dry parts of Australia
    desert pea; Clianthus formosus; Clianthus speciosus; Sturt pea.
WordNet

sugar pea

  • noun variety of pea plant producing peas having thin flat edible pods
    snow pea.
  • noun green peas with flat edible pods
    snow pea.
WordNet

sugar snap pea

  • noun variety of pea plant producing peas having crisp rounded edible pods
    snap pea.
  • noun green peas with edible pods that are very crisp and not flat
WordNet

Sweet pea

  • noun climbing garden plant having fragrant pastel-colored flowers
    Lathyrus odoratus; sweetpea.
WordNet
  • (Bot.), the annual plant Lathyrus odoratus; also, its many-colored, sweet-scented blossoms.
Webster 1913

tangier pea

  • noun North African annual resembling the sweet pea having showy but odorless flowers
    Tangier peavine; Lalthyrus tingitanus.
WordNet

western australia coral pea

  • noun vigorous climber of the forests of western Australia; grown for their dense racemes of attractive bright rose-purple flowers
    Hardenbergia comnptoniana.
WordNet

wild pea

  • noun any of various plants of the family Leguminosae that usually grow like vines
WordNet

wild sweet pea

  • noun perennial subshrub of eastern North America having downy leaves yellowish and rose flowers and; source of rotenone
    goat's rue; Tephrosia virginiana; catgut.
WordNet

winged pea

  • noun a tuberous twining annual vine bearing clusters of purplish flowers and pods with four jagged wings; Old World tropics
    winged bean; Psophocarpus tetragonolobus; Manila bean; goa bean; goa bean vine.
  • noun sprawling European annual having a 4-winged edible pod
    Lotus tetragonolobus; asparagus pea.
WordNet

yellow pea

  • noun western United States bushy herb having yellow pea-like flowers
    Thermopsis macrophylla; golden pea; false lupine.
WordNet