plural of flower
"The garden is full of colorful flowers blooming after the spring rain."
In plain English: Flowers are the colorful, scented parts of plants that grow on stems and often turn into fruit or seeds.
"She planted a row of colorful flowers in her garden."
Usage: Use "flowers" to refer collectively to multiple blossoms or plants that produce blooms. Avoid using it to describe abstract concepts like feelings or situations, which should instead be described with words like "feelings" or "circumstances."
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flower
"The garden flowers beautifully every spring when the sun warms the soil."
In plain English: To flowers means to grow into a person who is kind and helpful to others.
"The artist will flowers her garden with bright colors next spring."
Usage: Flowers is the third-person singular verb form used only when describing an action performed by he, she, or it. Avoid using this word to describe the plural noun meaning blooms unless you are specifically discussing how a single plant grows.
A surname.
"During the family reunion, Uncle Flowers shared some stories about his great-grandfather who was also named Flowers."
Derived from Old French flor (flower) and Latin flos, the term originally referred to the blossoms of plants but has evolved to metaphorically signify periods of beauty or prosperity. The plural form emerged in Middle English to denote multiple blossoms collectively.