narcisse or jonquille
'Narciso' is a Spanish equivalent of 'daffodil' [Narcissus spp].The masculine noun 'narciso' means 'daffodil'. Its singular definite article is 'el' ['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'un' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'nahr-SEE-soh'.
The Irish Gaelic word for 'daffodil' is Lus an chroimchinn (plant of the bowed head).
The likely word is daffodil (a flower).
Navidad means Christmas
'Daffodil' is an English equivalent of 'narcisse' [Narcissus spp].The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is 'le' ['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'un' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'nahr-seess'.
The national plant is the leek and national flower is the daffodil which both are very important to the Welsh on the first of March which is St David's day or in Welsh Dydd gwyl ddewi.The Welsh word for daffodil is 'cenhinen Bedr' and the word for leek is 'cenhinen'.
Daffodils start to grow in spring.
"une jonquille" (feminine noun) is the yellow flower spelled "jonquil" in English.
Daffodils is 'Cennin Pedr" in Welsh. However, when translated it actual means "Peters Leek"
"Hello!" or "Hey there!" as a greeting and "cowslip," "cuckoo bird," "cuckoo clock," "old crate (rickety airplane)," "wild daffodil" or "wild narcissus" as a noun are English equivalents of the French word coucou. Context makes clear which option suits. The pronunciation will be "koo-koo" in French.
"Daffodils" is the plural of "daffodil."
Silly, Billy, willy-nilly, filly, Phili, lily, Millie, Milly, Jilly