myrtle• Other images of her were adored in a myrtle and a cedar.• A myrtlewarbler in a flowering maple tree repeatedly probed into the massed flowers.• In that sorrowful but lovelyspot, shaded with groves of myrtle, Aeneas caughtsight of Dido.• I saw and heard several myrtle warblers, along with the first pine, black-and-white, and Nashville warblers.• The wolf's yellow eyes shone, and he ran into the myrtle bushes, pulled Bertha out, and ate her.• The myrtle was her tree; the dove her bird-sometimes, too, the sparrow and the swan.• Dwarfwaxmyrtle is an evergreenshrub in the 2-to-4-foot range.
Originmyrtle
(1300-1400)Old Frenchmirtille, from Latinmyrtus, from Greekmyrtos