

J.sambac in bloom along with an unopened bud. The flowers smell exactly like the tea. Tags: Jasmine View |
Click to enlarge Life Size Jasmine cardboard cutout This life sized stand up stands 5 1 x 25 tall All of our cardboard standees will Tags: Jasmine View |
JASMINE Jasminum sambac Jasmine flowers have been used to flavor tea for centuries It is most common to consume jasmine flavored tea with meals or right after meals as the Tags: Jasmine View |
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jasmine image = Jasmine Bud in Chennai during Spring.JPG image_caption = Jasminum sambac regnum = Plantae unranked_divisio = Angiosperms unranked_classis = Eudicots unranked_ordo = Asterids ordo = Lamiales familia = Oleaceae tribus = Jasmineae genus = Jasminum genus_authority = L. (Carl Linnaeus) (1753 (Species Plantarum)) type_species = Jasminum officinale L. +subdivision_ranks = Species subdivision = More than 200 species, see List of Jasminum species (List of Jasminum species) Sources: ING, CPN, UniProt
at Talakona forest, in Chittoor District of Andhra Pradesh, India. cultivar of Jasminum sambac in flower with an unopened bud. The flower smells like the tea as it opens. Jasmine (Jasminum, pron-en?d?�zm?n?m, from Old French Jasmine which is from the Arabic (Arabic language) from Persian (Farsi) yasmin, i.e. "gift from God", ) is a genus of shrubs and vines in the olive family (Oleaceae), with about 200 species, native to tropical and warm temperate regions of the Old World. Most species grow as climbers on other plants or are trained in gardens on chicken wire, trellis gates or fences, or made to scramble through shrubs of open texture. The leaves can be either evergreen (green all year round) or deciduous (falling in autumn).