: a mariposa lily (Calochortus nuttallii) of western North America having mostly white or in some areas mostly yellow flowers mottled with a darker color
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One is particularly popular: the sego lilies snowing over SLC's skyline.—Erin Alberty, Axios, 12 Feb. 2025 Women’s groups around the country began making their choices, and, in the decades that followed, states codified their selections and added others: the sagebrush of Nevada, the Cherokee rose of Georgia, the sego lily of Utah.—Casey Cep, The New Yorker, 28 Dec. 2024 Zoom in: The chaps feature shimmering sego lilies sewn with jewels onto white leather.—Erin Alberty, Axios, 18 Dec. 2024 Gone are the spears, the twin American flags, the bald eagle clutching a white crest, the beehive, the sego lilies.—Kim Bellware, Washington Post, 25 Mar. 2023 The sego lily is Utah's state flower.—Olivia Munson, USA TODAY, 5 Feb. 2023 The initiative’s website lists similar themes and symbols found in all the designs: such as pioneers, Beehive, national parks, Great Salt Lake, sego lily and Delicate Arch.—Palak Jayswal, The Salt Lake Tribune, 8 Sep. 2022 Meinking’s original design featured a white sego lily flower on a blue triangular background, while Kennedy-Yoon’s design featured a hexagonal honeybee on a white and blue background.—Andy Larsen, The Salt Lake Tribune, 24 Sep. 2020
Word History
Etymology
sego the bulb of the sego lily, from Southern Paiute siγoʔo
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