Plan·tain, n. Bot. Any plant of the genus Plantago, but especially the Plantago major, a low herb with broad spreading radical leaves, and slender spikes of minute flowers. It is a native of Europe, but now found near the abode of civilized man in nearly all parts of the world.
Indian plantain. Bot. See under Indian.
Mud plantain, a homely North American aquatic plant (Heteranthera reniformis), having broad, reniform leaves.
Rattlesnake plantain, an orchidaceous plant (Goodyera pubescens), with the leaves blotched and spotted with white.
Ribwort plantain. See Ribwort.
Robin's plantain, the Erigeron bellidifolium, a common daisylike plant of North America.
Water plantain, a plant of the genus Alisma, having acrid leaves, and formerly regarded as a specific against hydrophobia. --Loudon.
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mud plantain
n : grassy-leaved North American aquatic plant with yellow
star-shaped blossoms [syn: water star grass, Heteranthera
dubia]