A rose is a flowering shrub of the genusRosa, and the flower of this shrub. There are more than a hundred species of wild roses, all from the northern hemisphere and mostly from temperate regions. The species form a group of generally thorny shrubs or climbers, and sometimes trailing plants, reaching 2–5 m tall, rarely reaching as high as 20 m by climbing over other plants.
The name originates from Latinrosa, borrowed through Oscan from colonial Greek in southern Italyrhodion (Aeolicwrodion), from Aramaicwurrdā, from Assyrianwurtinnu, from Old Iranian *warda (cf. Avestanwarda, Sogdianward, Parthianwâr).
The leaves of most species are 5–15 cm long, pinnate, with (3–) 5–9 (–13) leaflets and basal stipules; the leaflets usually have a serrated margin, and often a few small thorns on the underside of the stem. The vast majority of roses are deciduous, but a few (particularly in southeast Asia) are evergreen or nearly so.