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  2. Oxalis acetosella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_acetosella

    The common wood sorrel is sometimes referred to as a shamrock and given as a gift on Saint Patrick's Day. This is due to its trifoliate clover-like leaf, and to early references to shamrock being eaten. Despite this, it is generally accepted that the plant described as "true" shamrock is a species of clover, usually lesser clover (Trifolium ...

  3. Oxalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis

    Oxalis bowiei – Bowie's wood-sorrel, Cape shamrock; Oxalis brasiliensis – Brazilian woodsorrel; Oxalis caerulea – blue woodsorrel; Oxalis caprina; Oxalis corniculata – creeping wood sorrel, procumbent yellow-sorrel, sleeping beauty, chichoda bhaji (India) Oxalis debilis Kunth; Oxalis decaphylla – ten-leaved pink-sorrel, tenleaf wood ...

  4. Oxalis montana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_montana

    Oxalis montana is a species of flowering plant in the family Oxalidaceae known by the common names mountain woodsorrel, wood shamrock, sours and white woodsorrel. It may also be called common woodsorrel , though this name also applies to its close relative, Oxalis acetosella .

  5. Oxalis triangularis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_triangularis

    Oxalis triangularis, commonly called false shamrock, is a species of perennial plant in the family Oxalidaceae. It is native to several countries in southern South America . This woodsorrel is typically grown as a houseplant but can be grown outside in USDA climate zones 8a–11, preferably in light shade.

  6. Shamrock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamrock

    This flowering Shamrock is a South American species of wood sorrel Oxalis regnellii. Linnaeus based his information that the Irish ate shamrock on the comments of English Elizabethan authors such as Edmund Spenser who remarked that the shamrock used to be eaten by the Irish, especially in times of hardship and famine.

  7. Oxalis bowiei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_bowiei

    Oxalis bowiei, Bowie's wood-sorrel, [1] [2] red-flower woodsorrel, [3] or Cape shamrock, is a plant from the genus Oxalis, which is native to what was Cape Province and KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa. It has also been naturalized in Australia.