The palmately cleft leaves are broadly circular in form. The flowers have five petals and are coloured white, pink, purple, or blue, often with distinctive veining.<ref name="Allaby" /> Geraniums will grow in any soil as long as it is not waterlogged.<ref name="Tibballs">Template:Cite book</ref> Propagation is by semiripe cuttings in summer, by seed, or by division in autumn or spring.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
File:Floral diagram Geranium.jpgFloral diagram of a Geranium garden hybrid called ‘Ann Thomson’, showing 5 free sepals, 5 free petals, 10 free fertile stamens, and a superior ovary consisting of 5 merged carpels, with 5 style branches
The genus name is derived from Ancient GreekTemplate:Lang (géranos) 'crane'. The English name 'cranesbill' derives from the resemblance of the fruit capsule of some of the species to a crane's head and bill. The ovary portion forms the head and the prolonged stigma creates the appearance of a beak.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="APS">Template:Cite web</ref>
The flowers are typically five-petaled and white to purple. The leaves are palmate divided into narrow, pointed segments.<ref name=":0" />
The fruit capsule consists of five cells joined to a column produced from the centre of the flower. The cells form lobes which eventually separate, each containing one seed.<ref name=":0" /> When the fruit is ripe, the beak-like stigma springs open and casts the ovoid, streamlined seeds some distance, dispersing the seeds.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Confusingly, "geranium" is also the common name of members of the genus Pelargonium, which are also in the familyGeraniaceae and are widely grown as horticultural bedding plants. Linnaeus originally included all the species in one genus, Geranium, but they were later separated into two genera by Charles L’Héritier in 1789.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Other former members of the genus are now classified in Erodium, including the plants known as filarees in North America.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The term "hardy geranium" is often applied to horticultural Geraniums to distinguish them from the Pelargoniums, which are not winter-hardy in temperate horticulture.<ref name="Parer">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> However, not all Geranium species are winter-hardy (see below).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The shape of the flowers offers one way of distinguishing between the two genera Geranium and Pelargonium. Geranium flowers have five very similar petals, and are thus radially symmetrical (actinomorphic), whereas Pelargonium (and also Erodium) flowers have two upper petals which are different from the three lower petals, so the flowers have a single plane of symmetry (zygomorphic).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
A number of geranium species are cultivated for horticultural use and for pharmaceutical products. Some of the more commonly grown species include:
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All the above species are perennials and generally winter-hardy plants, grown for their attractive flowers and foliage. They are long-lived and most have a mounding habit, with palmately lobed foliage. Some species have spreading rhizomes. They are normally grown in part shade to full sun, in well-draining but moisture retentive soils, rich in humus.<ref name=Phillips1993>Template:Citation</ref> Other perennial species grown for their flowers and foliage include: Geranium argenteum, G. eriostemon, G. farreri, G. nodosum, G. procurrens, G. pylzowianum, G. renardii, G. traversii, G. tuberosum, G. versicolor, G. wallichianum, and G. wlassovianum. Some of these are not winter-hardy in cold areas and are grown in specialized gardens like rock gardens.<ref name=Jelitto1990>Template:Citation</ref> Geranium 'Johnson's Blue' is a hybrid between G. himalayense (southwestern China), with G. pratense (European meadow cranesbill).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>