azalea

noun

aza·​lea ə-ˈzāl-yə How to pronounce azalea (audio)
: any of a subgenus (Azalea) of rhododendrons with funnel-shaped corollas and usually deciduous leaves including many species and hybrid forms cultivated as ornamentals

Examples of azalea in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
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On the west side of A1A, the park offers lovely formal gardens — ancient spreading oak trees, a meandering waterway fed by a clear spring, plantings of roses and azaleas and a gazebo. Bonnie Gross, Sun Sentinel, 6 Aug. 2025 Leave all the new growth, as azaleas are not grafted plants, but grown from cuttings. Tom MacCubbin, The Orlando Sentinel, 2 Aug. 2025 Due to the alkaline soil in Southern California, gardenias and other acid-loving plants such as azaleas, blueberry bushes, and coffee trees may exhibit a condition known as interveinal chlorosis; on older leaves, veins are green while spaces in between the veins are yellow. Joshua Siskin, Oc Register, 26 July 2025 When azaleas are growing in these soils use an acid-forming azalea fertilizer at each feeding. Tom MacCubbin, The Orlando Sentinel, 24 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for azalea

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from New Latin Azalea, genus name, borrowed from Greek azaléā, feminine of azaléos "dry, parched, withered," from az-, base of ázō, ázein "to dry out, parch," and in same sense azánesthai, azaínein (perhaps going back to an Indo-European verbal base *h2ed- "dry up," whence also Hittite ḫāt- "dry up, become parched") + -aleos, adjective suffix, often paired with derivatives based on a nasal consonant

Note: The genus name Azalea was introduced by Linnaeus, first in Systema naturae, 1735. Linnaeus nowhere comments in print on the reason for the name. Hortus Cliffortianus (Amsterdam, 1737), p. 69, contains the note "Nominis rationem vide Fl. lapp. 89 e" ("for the reasoning behind the name see Flora Lapponica 89 e"), but in this paragraph of the plant description in Flora Lapponica (Amsterdam, 1737), Linnaeus simply notes why he rejected the earlier name Chamaerhododendros (it violated his prescriptions against sesquipedalian words and against forming a name by prefixing an existing name). Hence subsequent hypotheses on the choice of the name (as, for example "either from the dry soil in which it flourishes, or from its dry brittle wood" in the Oxford English Dictionary, first edition) are purely speculative. — An earlier Indo-European etymology for Greek ázein saw it as reflecting *as-d-, a "root extension" of *as-, in laryngealist terms *h1eh2s-, which also underlay Old Polish and Old Czech ozd "structure for drying malt," Old Czech ozditi "to dry (germinated grain for malt)." See arid and note at ash entry 2.

First Known Use

1755, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of azalea was in 1755

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Cite this Entry

“Azalea.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/azalea. Accessed 20 Aug. 2025.

Kids Definition

azalea

noun
aza·​lea ə-ˈzāl-yə How to pronounce azalea (audio)
: any of numerous rhododendrons that have funnel-shaped flowers, usually shed their leaves in the fall, and include many grown as ornamental plants

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