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  2. How to Find a Lucky Four-Leaf Clover for St. Patrick's Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/lucky-four-leaf-clover-st-123000972.html

    Start searching for your own four-leaf clover by standing and looking for a break in pattern on the leaves. A four-leaf clover has a white V-shaped pattern on each leaf, which looks like a diamond ...

  3. Marsilea quadrifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsilea_quadrifolia

    Aquatic fern bearing 4 parted leaf resembling 'Four-leaf clover' (Trifolium).Leaves floating in deep water or erect in shallow water or on land. Leaflets obdeltoid, to 3/4" long, glaucous, petioles to 8" long; Sporocarp (ferns) ellipsoid, to 3/16" long, dark brown, on stalks to 3/4" long, attached to base of petioles.

  4. Four-leaf clover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-leaf_clover

    The four-leaf clover is a rare variation of the common three-leaf clover that has four leaflets instead of three. According to traditional sayings, such clovers bring good luck , [ 1 ] a belief that dates back to at least the 17th century.

  5. Marsilea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsilea

    Common names include water clover and four-leaf clover because of the long-stalked leaves have four clover-like lobes and are either present above water or submerged. It is worth clarifying that these plants are not clovers.

  6. Marsileaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsileaceae

    The group is commonly known as the "pepperwort family" or as the "water-clover family" because the leaves of the genus Marsilea superficially resemble the leaves of a four-leaf clover. In all, the family contains three genera and 50 to 80 species with most of those belonging to Marsilea. [1] [2]

  7. Quatrefoil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quatrefoil

    In heraldic terminology, a quatrefoil is a representation of a four-leaf clover, a rare variant of the trefoil or three-leaf clover. It is sometimes shown "slipped", i.e. with an attached stalk. In archaic English it is called a caterfoil, [1] or variant spellings thereof.

  8. Oxalis tetraphylla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxalis_tetraphylla

    Other English common names for this plant include Lucky Clover, Four-Leaf Sorrel, Four-Leaf Pink-Sorrel and others. [1] It is sometimes called "the iron cross plant" or "oxalis iron cross" because the leaves loosely resemble the iron cross symbol, though this name is not a classic folk term and has fallen out of favour due to the bad political ...

  9. Shamrock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shamrock

    The results show that there is no one "true" species of shamrock, but that Trifolium dubium (lesser clover) is considered to be the shamrock by roughly half of Irish people, and Trifolium repens (white clover) by another third, with the remaining sixth split between Trifolium pratense (red clover), Medicago lupulina (black medick), Oxalis acetosella (wood sorrel), and various other species of ...