flora

noun

flo·​ra ˈflȯr-ə How to pronounce flora (audio)
plural floras also florae ˈflȯr-ˌē How to pronounce flora (audio) -ˌī How to pronounce flora (audio)
1
: a treatise on or list of the plants of an area or period
2
: plant, bacterial, or fungal life
especially : such life characteristic of a region, period, or special environment
fossil flora
intestinal flora
compare fauna

Did you know?

You may be familiar with the common phrase “flora and fauna,” which broadly refers to just about every visible living thing. While fauna specifically refers to the animals of a region, flora represents the plants. Flora made its way into English from New Latin via the Latin word flōra, which comes from the name of the Roman goddess of flowers and the flowering season (the time of the year when flowers bloom). Flora, who was depicted as a beautiful young woman in a long, flowing dress with flowers in her hair, strewing flowers over the earth, was especially known for wildflowers and plants not raised for food. Her name also lives on and continues to thrive through the related words floral, floret, and flourish.

Examples of flora in a Sentence

an amazing variety of coastal flora the floras of different coastal regions
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Print Collector/Getty Images Now, Elon Musk’s new pledge to preemptively speed the globe’s flora and fauna to a second-world sanctum represents a remarkable philanthropic expansion of his overarching Mars missions. Kevin Holden Platt, Forbes.com, 28 Aug. 2025 Silver & Earth Directed and produced by Kathryn Ramey This film explores the concept of silver from the perspectives of the flora, fauna and landscapes it has been used to represent. Matthew Carey, Deadline, 28 Aug. 2025 Younger children have access to the Kids for All Seasons club, recently renovated to reflect the area’s flora and fauna, while teens can check out the Tuanis Teen Center—a rarity in the resort world with a basketball court and social spaces for meeting new friends. Devorah Lev-Tov, AFAR Media, 26 Aug. 2025 The drinks menu also takes inspiration from the flora, featuring specialty lattes such as Rose Cake, Dirty Daisy, Honey Bee and Bride's Gown. Endia Fontanez, AZCentral.com, 22 Aug. 2025 See All Example Sentences for flora

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from New Latin, from Latin Flōra, the goddess of flowers and the flowering season, thematicized derivative from the stem of flōr-, flōs "flower, bloom" — more at flower entry 1

Note: In the early modern period, the names of figures from ancient myth or history were featured in book titles as symbols of the subject matter—as Urania for a work on astronomy, Mithridates for a work on languages, and Atlas for a cartographical work. Along such lines the name of the Roman goddess of flowers was used in the title of Latin works dealing with the cultivation of plants, as Flora, seu de florum cultura libri quattuor (Rome, 1633) by the Jesuit scholar Giovanni Battista Ferrari (1584-1655). A book by the Danish physician and naturalist Simon Paulli (1603-80) entitled Flora Danica, Det er: Dansk urtebog ("Danish Flora, that is, a Danish herbal book") (Copenhagen, 1648) described the medicinal plants of Denmark. Here the name Flora is used as a sort of metonym for the plants of the country, a usage also taken up in a Latin poem introducing the work, in which Balthica Flora ("Baltic Flora") is described as bringing forth "swelling sprouts" (turgentia germina) from her bosom. Similar uses of Flora followed, as in the Flora Sinensis ("Chinese Flora") (Vienna, 1656) by the Polish Jesuit Michał Boym (ca. 1612-59). In the eighteenth century flora began to be used generically outside of book titles as a collective name for the plants of a region or habitat. For details. and examples of Flora used metonymically in seventeenth-century Latin prose, see Dominik Beerens, "The Meaning of Flora," Humanistica Lovaniensia, vol. 68, no. 1 (Spring, 2019), pp. 237-49.

First Known Use

1777, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of flora was in 1777

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Cite this Entry

“Flora.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/flora. Accessed 2 Sep. 2025.

Kids Definition

flora

noun
flo·​ra ˈflōr-ə How to pronounce flora (audio)
ˈflȯr-
plural floras also florae ˈflō(ə)r-ˌē How to pronounce flora (audio)
ˈflȯ(ə)r-,
-ˌī
: plants or plant life especially of a region, period, or environment

Medical Definition

flora

noun
plural floras also florae ˈflō(ə)r-ˌē How to pronounce flora (audio) ˈflȯ(ə)r- How to pronounce flora (audio)
-ˌī
1
: plant life
especially : the plants characteristic of a region, period, or special environment
fossil flora
compare fauna
2
: the microorganisms (as bacteria or fungi) living in or on the body
the beneficial flora of the intestine
potentially harmful skin flora
floral adjective

More from Merriam-Webster on flora

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