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Horn of Plenty (Grizzly Bear album), 2004 Horn of Plenty (The Remixes), a 2005 album by Grizzly Bear; Horn of Plenty, a 1952 album by Dizzy Gillespie; Horn of Plenty, a 1957 album by cornettist James F. Burke; Horn of Plenty, a 2008 Cuban comedy film; Horn of Plenty, the national anthem of Panem in the fictional world of The Hunger Games; see ...
Cornucopia of a Roman statue of Livia as Fortuna, 42-52 AD, marble, Altes Museum, Berlin.. In classical antiquity, the cornucopia (/ ˌ k ɔːr n (j) ə ˈ k oʊ p i ə,-n (j) uː-/; from Latin cornu 'horn' and copia 'abundance'), also called the horn of plenty, was a symbol of abundance and nourishment, commonly a large horn-shaped container overflowing with produce, flowers, or nuts.
Craterellus cornucopioides, or horn of plenty, is an edible mushroom found in North America and Eurasia. It is also known as the black chanterelle , black trumpet , trompette de la mort (French), trompeta de la mort (Catalan) or trumpet of the dead .
Horn of Plenty is the debut studio album by American rock band Grizzly Bear, released on November 9, 2004, by Kanine Records. Primarily a solo album by founding member Edward Droste , the album also features contributions from future drummer Christopher Bear .
The Horn of Plenty: Everything But the Kitchen Sink (Autumn/Winter 2009), generally referred to as The Horn of Plenty, is the thirty-fourth collection McQueen made for his eponymous fashion house. [47] It was conceived as a dark satire of the fashion industry with pastiches of notable designers and McQueen's past works.
Horn of Plenty's menu offers down-home food, including chicken-fried chicken, baked beans, mashed potatoes, cheese biscuits, pork chops, fried okra, macaroni and cheese, and cornbread.
The species name means "of the Cornucopia" (horn of plenty), which is appropriate since the mushrooms are edible and sometimes take on a shape similar to a drinking horn. The original definition of this species, or basionym, was made by Jean-Jacques Paulet in 1793 as Dendrosarcos cornucopiae.
The "horn of Amalthea", referred to in Latin literature as the cornucopia, [16] is a magical horn generally described as being able to produce an inexhaustible supply of any food or drink desired. [17] The tale of this horn seems to have originated as an independent tradition to the raising of Zeus, though it is uncertain when the two merged. [18]