Sometimes placed in Smilacaceae.
Fragile twining plant of South Africa with bright green flattened stems and glossy foliage popular as a floral decoration.
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1The handsomest house in town was a bower of smilax and hothouse roses.
2The front was decorated with American beauty roses, in addition to the smilax.
3The seven-branched candlesticks on either side of the pulpit were entwined with smilax.
4Stuart and Eugenia paused before the tall gate of smilax and American beauties.
5A gilt chandelier was suspended in the middle, from which stretched garlands of real smilax.
6This insect is larger than P. smilax, but resembles it extremely in its upper side.
7Within a wealth of palms and smilax was used.
8A canopy of asparagus and smilax was twined over the recess where the ceremony was performed.
9The little porch was hidden from view by a screen of yellow roses and Southern smilax.
10The odor from a vine of smilax thickly covered with the small flowers is very agreeable.
11The stair-rail was wreathed in fire-weed and early golden-rod, and Temperance texts in smilax decked the walls.
12It is hard to say what the florist could do without smilax, so indispensable has it become.
13Their hats were adorned with trailing wreaths of smilax, and about their shoulders were garlands of carnations.
14It's decorated vith two thousand dollars' worth of bride roses an' lilies of de valley an' smilax.
15The New Yorker, February 28, 1931 P. 65 The festoons of withered smilax.
16He took the chair,-inthat pretty observatory parlor, which Polly had made so bright with smilax and ivy.