Buds Sentence Examples

buds
  • Very soon the green, pointed buds showed signs of opening.

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  • This is in some degree parallel to the cases described above, in which a planula gives rise to the hydrorhiza, and buds a polyp laterally.

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  • It buds medusae, which, however, are as yet only known in an immature condition (C. Mereschkowsky [41]).

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  • Obelia forms numerous polyserial stems of the characteristic zigzag pattern growing up from a creeping basal stolon, and buds the medusa of the same name.

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  • Cunoctantha fowleri Browne, buds are formed from the sub-umbrella on the under side of the stomach pouches, where later the gonads are developed.

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  • Quite recently, another mode of budding has been described in Trypanosyllis gemmipara, where a crowd of some fifty buds arising symmetrically are produced at the tail end of the worm.

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  • In early spring the buds break to reveal wonderful yellow catkins that light up the border.

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  • Dr. Baguant, ENT specialist comments, " Cotton buds can cause the formation of cerumen plugs by pushing cerumen toward the tympanic membrane.

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  • Dr. Baguant, ENT specialist comments, " Cotton buds can cause the formation of cerumen plugs by pushing cerumen plugs by pushing cerumen toward the tympanic membrane.

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  • Mood Indigo returns in February January 27th, 2006 The New Year brings forth a new jazz flavor for your musical taste buds.

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  • The time taken for each explant to start growing a new leaf, new roots, or develop flower buds, can be recorded.

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  • The Vertebrata come within the scope of our subject, chiefly as destructive agents which cause wounds or devour young shoots and foliage, &c. Rabbits and other burrowing animals injure roots, squirrels and birds snip off buds, horned cattle strip off bark, and so forth.

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  • They may occur on all parts, buds, leaves, stems or roots, as shown by the numerous species of Cynips on oak, Phylloxera on vines, &c. The local damage is small, - but the general injury to assimilation, absorption and other functions, may be important if the numbers increase.

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  • Buds of a particular tree growing near the sea were described as producing barnacles, and these, falling into the water, were supposed to develop into geese.

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  • Here, however, the buds are lateral, though produced from a budding may be defective upon one or other of the noto a b FIG.

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  • The summer pruning of established wall or espalier-rail trees consists chiefly in the timely displacing, shortening back, or rubbing off of the superfluous shoots, so that the winter pruning, in horizontal training, is little more than adjusting the leading shoots and thinning out the spurs, which should be kept close to the wall and allowed to retain but two or at most three buds.

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  • The adult caterpillar may be described as a creature the hypodermis of which is studded with Adapted from Koerschelt and buds that expand and form the butterHerder, and Lowne.

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  • We are therefore entitled to assume that the suppressed wings of Exopterygota tend to reappear; and, speaking of the past, we may say that if after a period of suppression the wings began to reappear as hypodermal buds while a more rigid pressure was exerted by the cuticle, the growth of the buds would necessarily be inwards, and we should have incipient endopterygotism.

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  • It sheds its " forms " (as the buds are called), blooms, and even half-grown bolls in great numbers.

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  • Examination showed that although the weevil attacked the young buds these did not drop off, but that a special growth of tissue inside the bud frequently killed the grub.

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  • Paris green kills it in its young stages before it has entered the buds or bolls.

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  • Liquorice was largely grown as early as 1700-1701, when the corporation prohibited the sale of buds or sets of the plant.

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  • If these be too luxuriant, they yield nothing but leaves; and if too weak, they are incapable of developing flower buds.

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  • In well-developed shoots the buds are generally double, or rather triple, a wood bud growing between two fruit buds; the shoot must be cut back to one of these, or else to a wood bud alone, so that a young shoot may be produced to draw up the sap beyond the fruit, this being generally desirable to secure its proper swelling.

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  • The best-placed healthy young shoot produced from the wood buds at the base of the bearing branch is to be carefully preserved and in due time nailed to the wall.

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  • When a shoot promises blossom, it is generally at some distance from the point of insertion into the old wood, and the intermediate space is covered with wood buds.

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  • On the spurs thus formed blossom buds will be developed early in the following season.

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  • It may also be stated here that when occasion arises peachtrees well furnished with buds may be transplanted and forced immediately without risking the crop of fruit, a matter of some importance when, as sometimes happens, a tree may accidentally fail.

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  • These vascular buds grow out in various directions as little solid projections of cells; they then become channelled and form the new but temporary meshwork.

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  • Each podium consists of a portion of the stem bearing one or more leaves, each with an axillary bud or buds, and terminating in a tendril or an inflorescence.

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  • The shoots are cut back to buds close to the stem, which should be encouraged to form alternately at equal distances right and left, by removing those buds from the original shoot which are not conveniently placed.

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  • The young shoots from these buds are to be gently brought to a horizontal position, by bending them a little at a time.

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  • The plant is readily propagated by cuttings, a piece of the stem bearing buds at its nodes will root rapidly when placed in sufficiently moist ground.

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  • This fact gave rise in ancient times to the false idea that the tapeworm originated from the union of these segments; and in modern times it has led to the view that the tapeworm is not a segmented organism (the monozoic view), but is a colony composed of the scolex which arises from the embryo and of the proglottides, which are asexually produced buds that, upon or before attaining their full size and maturity, become separated, grow, and, in some cases, live freely for a time, just as the segments of a strobilating jelly-fish grow, separate and become sexual individuals (the polyzoic view).

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  • The most remarkable feature of this cystic development is the formation in many genera of several internal buds within a common cyst, each of which forms an independent inverted scolex (Coenurus, Polycercus); or these internal vesicles may bud off a large number of scolices on their external surface (Staphylocystis).

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  • On this view, multiple scolices are, therefore, not buds, but an example of the unlocalized organization of the embryo such as occurs in other groups of animals, and is demonstrated by experiment.

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  • When the plants show signs of flowering they are topped " to prevent seed formation, the terminal buds being removed, and only a certain number of leaves left on each plant to ripen.

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  • Other caterpillars, "budworms" (Heliothis, spp.), attack the buds or burrow into the seed-pods.

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  • The buds are not unlike those of the ash; and it frequently happens that in the axils of the leaves, instead of one, several buds may be formed.

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  • The utility of this is seen in seasons when the shoot produced from the first bud is killed by frost; then one of the supplementary buds starts into growth, and thus replaces the injured shoot.

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  • It is a small bush propagated from cuttings which are left to grow for three years; the leaves are then stripped, except a few buds which develop next year into young shoots, these being cut and sold in bunches under the name of khat mubarak; next year on the branches cut back new shoots grow; these are sold as khat malhani, or second-year kat, which commands the highest price.

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  • Reproduction sexual and by means of "statoblasts," peculiar internal buds protected by a chitinous shell.

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  • In other Entoprocta the buds on a horseshoe retain a high degree of individuality, a shaped l o p h o - thread-like stolon giving off the cylindrical phore; stalks, each of which dilates at its end i, Ectocyst; into the body of a zooid.

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  • At their base they are provided with stipules, which are also modified to form the scales investing the winter buds.

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  • These tufts show the position of buds, of which, however, comparatively few are developed.

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  • They have the fleshy stems characteristic of the order, these being either globose, oblong or cylindrical, and either ribbed as in Melocactus, or broken up into distinct tubercles, and most of them armed with stiff sharp pines, set in little woolly cushions occupying the place of the buds.

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  • These large plants have from 40 to 50 ridges, on which the buds and clusters of spines are sunk at intervals, the aggregate number of the spines having been in some cases computed at upwards of 50,000 on a single plant.

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  • The margins of these leaf-like branches are more or less crenately notched, the notches representing buds, as do the spine-clusters in the spiny genera; and from these crenatures the large showy flowers are produced.

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  • They fly about from July till October, living upon the sap of the vine, which is sucked up by the rostrum from the leaves or buds.

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  • They lay their parthenogenetically produced eggs in the angles of the veins of the leaves, in the buds, or, if the season is already far advanced, in the bark.

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  • These forms are termed the stock-mothers; they creep into the buds of the vine, and, as these develop intofthe young leaves, insert their proboscis into the upper side.

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  • Winged Female which lives on leaves and buds of vine, and lays parthogenetically eggs of two kinds, one developing into a wingless female, the other into a male.

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  • In other cases small portions of the stem or leaves give rise to new plants by budding, as in Bryophyllum, where buds develop at the edges of the leaf and form new plants.

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  • An excellent packing material for dormant buds is coarsely crushed woodcharcoal to which has been added a sprinkling of flowers of sulphur.

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  • Their formation from buds which normally would have yielded leaves and shoots is explained by Parfitt as the outcome of an effort at fructification induced by oviposition, such as has been found to result in several plants from injury by insect-agency or otherwise.

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  • In the second place, the power of non-sexual reproduction by budding is practically of universal occurrence among the Hydrozoa, and by the buds failing to separate from the parent stock, colonies are produced, more or less complicated in structure and often of great size.

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  • Medusae often have the power of budding, and the buds are formed either on the manubrium, or at the margin of the umbrella, or on an outgrowth or "stolon" produced from the exumbral surface.

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  • The whole tree, but especially the bark and leaves, has a very pleasant resinous odour, and from the young leaves and buds an essential oil is distilled with water.

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  • By gardeners the bullfinch has long been regarded as a deadly enemy, from its undoubted destruction of the buds of fruit-trees in spring-time, though whether the destruction is really so much of a detriment is by no means so undoubted.

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  • The reproduction of the higher plants takes place either asexually by the formation of buds or organs answering thereto, or sexually by the production of an embryo plant within the seed.

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  • This and like matters will, however, be more fitly considered in dealing hereafter with the buds and their treatment.

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  • The recognition of the various forms of buds and their modes of disposition in different plants is a matter of the first consequence in the operations of pruning and training.

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  • In some instances buds form on the roots, and may be used for purposes of propagation, as in the Japan quince, the globe thistle, the sea holly, some sea lavenders, Bocconia, Acanthus, &c. Of the tendency in buds to assume an independent existence gardeners avail themselves in the operations of striking " cuttings," and making " layers " and " pipings," as also in budding and grafting.

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  • In taking a slip or cutting the gardener removes from the parent plant a shoot having one or more buds or " eyes," in the case of the vine one only, and places it in a moist and sufficiently warm situation, where, as previously mentioned, undue evaporation from the surface is prevented.

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  • In other cases, where the buds themselves contain a sufficiency of nutritive matter for the young growths, the retention of leaves is not necessary.

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  • Planting late in spring should, as far as possible, be avoided, for the buds then begin to awaken into active life, and the draught upon the roots becomes great.

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  • The removal of weakly, sickly, overcrowded and gross infertile shoots is usually, however, a matter about which there can be few mistakes when once the habit of growth and the form and arrangement of the buds are known.

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  • Here we may conveniently mention certain variations from the normal condition in the size, form or disposition of buds or shoots on a given plant.

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  • It will have been gathered from what has been said that seeds cannot always be depended on to reproduce exactly the characteristics of the plant which yielded them; for instance, seeds of the greengage plum or of the Ribston pippin will produce a plum or an apple, but not these particular varieties, to perpetuate which grafts or buds must be employed.

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  • In others (Polystichum angulare proliferum) the stipes below and the rachis amongst the pinnae develop buds, which are often numerous and crowded.

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  • In others again (Woodwardia orientalis, Asplenium bulbiferum), buds are numerously produced on the upper surface of the fronds.

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  • For propagation the bulbiferous portion is pegged down on the surface of a pot of suitable soil; if kept close in a moist atmosphere, the little buds will soon strike root and form independent plants.

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  • In Cystopteris the buds are deciduous, falling off as the fronds acquire maturity, but, if collected and pressed into the surface of a pot of soil and kept close, they will grow up into young plants the following season.

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  • The whole branch, except a few buds at the extremity, is covered with soil.

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  • In the propagating house budding may be done at any season when the sap is in motion; but for fruit trees, roses, &c., in the open air, it is usually done in July or August, when the buds destined for the following year are completely formed in the axils of the leaves, and when the bark separates freely from the wood it covers.

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  • Those buds are to be preferred, as being best ripened, which occur on the middle portion of a young shoot, and which are quite dormant at the time.

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  • The pots should be watered so as to settle the soil, and be placed in the close atmosphere of the propagating pit or frame, where they will need scarcely any water until the buds are seen pushing through the surface.

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  • Pruning is a very important operation in the fruit garden, its object being twofold - (i) to give form to the tree, and (2) to induce the free production of flower buds as the precursors of a plentiful crop of fruit.

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  • If the shoots produced are not sufficient in number, or are badly placed, or very unequal in vigour, the head should be cut back moderately close, leaving a few inches only of the young shoots, which should be pruned back to buds so placed as to furnish shoots in the positions desired.

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  • The lowest branch would have four buds retained, the end one being on the lower side of the branch.

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  • The two next would be cut to three buds, which here also are fortunately so situated that the one to be left is on the lower side of the branches.

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  • Near the base of the stem are two prominent buds, which would produce two vigorous shoots, but these would be too near the ground, and the buds should therefore be suppressed; but, to strengthen the lower part, the weaker buds just above and below the lowest branch should be forced into growth, by making a transverse incision close above each.

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  • This upper shoot is at the next winter pruning to be cut down to within about a foot of the point whence it sprung, and its buds rubbed off except the upper one for a leader, and one on each side just below it to furnish another pair of side shoots; these being trained in position, the tree would appear as in fig.

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  • In the pear and apple the fruit is borne principally on spurs, and hence what is known as spur-pruning has to be adopted, the young shoots being all cut back nearly to their base, so as to cause fruit buds to evolve from the remaining eyes or buds.

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  • When this pruning is just brought to a balance with the vigour of the roots, the consequence is that fruit buds are formed all over the tree, instead of a thicket of sterile and useless wood.

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  • If vines have been neglected to be pruned, rub off the buds that are not wanted; this is safer than pruning now.

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  • These should be kept cut off close to the old plant, so that the full force of the root is expended in making the " crowns " or fruit buds for next season's crop. If plants are required for new beds, only the required number should be allowed to grow, and these may be layered in pots as recommended in July.

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  • The leaf of Venus's fly-trap (Dionaea muscipula) when cut off and placed in damp moss, with a pan of water underneath and a bell-glass for a cover, has produced buds from which young plants were obtained.

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  • Some species of saxifrage and of ferns also produce buds on their leaves and fronds.

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  • In Nymphaea micrantha buds appear at the upper part of the petiole.

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  • The buds of trees of temperate climates, which lie dormant during the winter, are protected by scale leaves.

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  • In plants of warm climates the buds have often no protective appendages, and are then said to be naked.

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  • But a serious blemish was his persistent separation of trees from herbs, a distinction whose falsity had been exposed by Jung and others, but to which Ray tried to give scientific foundation by denying the existence of buds in the latter.

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  • Many of the buds remain dormant, or are called to development under exceptional circumstances, such as the destruction of existing branches.

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  • For instance, the clipping of a hedge or the lopping of a tree will cause to develop numerous buds which may have been dormant for years.

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  • Where detachable buds are produced, which can be transported through the air to a distance, each of them is an incipient shoot which may have a root, and there is always reserve-food stored in some part of it.

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  • A relation between such vegetative distribution buds and production of flower is usually marked.

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  • Where there is free formation of buds there is little flower and commonly no seed, and the converse is also the case.

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  • Viviparous plants are an illustration of substitution of vegetative buds for flower.

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  • Distribution by seed appears to satisfy so well the requirements of Angiosperms that distribution by vegetative buds is only an occasional process.

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  • In Characeae no fewer than four methods of vegetative reproduction have been described, and the facility with which buds and branches are in these cases detached has been adduced as an evidence of affinity with Bryophyta, which, as a class, are distinguished by their ready resort to vegetative reproduction.

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  • C. Darwin believed, however, that there were indications that it occasionally occurred in plants, where it can be best observed, owing to the circumstance that so many plants are propagated by cuttings or buds, which really continue the existence of the same individual almost indefinitely.

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  • Krummholz oil, valued in Germany as an outward application in rheumatism and for bruises and sprains, is distilled from the young branches, and a fragrant white resin that exudes in some quantity from the buds is used for similar purposes and as a perfume, under the name of Hungarian balsam it is sold in the towns of Germany, being probably obtained from the Carpathians.

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  • Such buds are not, under ordinary circumstances, formed on roots.

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  • Potatoes are commonly propagated by planting whole tubers or by dividing the tubers, leaving to each segment or "set" one or two eyes or buds.

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  • The full-sized tubers are, however, preferable to smaller ones, as their larger buds tend to produce stronger shoots, and where cut sets are used the best returns are obtained from sets taken from the points of the tubers - not from their base.

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  • The wound may simply have set up that variation in the buds the occasional existence of which has been already noted.

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  • The buds, conspicuous for their size, are protected by a coat of a glutinous substance, which is impervious to water; in spring this melts, and the bud-scales are then cast off.

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  • The appendages posterior to the mandibles appear as buds on the ventral surface of the somites, and in the most primitive cases they become differentiated, like the somites which bear them, in regular order from before backwards.

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  • They destroy the young buds, shoots and fruits, and attack the young plants in their most delicate organs.

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  • The occurrence of buds in the axils of carpellary scales may, however, simply mean that buds, which are (C and D after Worsdell.) FIG.

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  • In many cases the buds formed do not separate from the parent but remain in continuity with it, thus forming colonies or stocks, which may reach a great size and contain a vast number of individuals.

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  • Further complications arise when the lower walls of the mother zooid become thickened and interpenetrated with solenia, from which buds are developed, so that lobose, tufted, or branched colonies are formed.The chief orders of the Synalcyonacea are founded upon the different architectural features of colonies produced by different modes of budding.

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  • In the order Stelechotokea the colony consists of a stem formed by a greatlyelongated mother zooid, and the daughter zooids are borne as lateral buds on the stem.

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  • Buds arise from the edge-zone which already communicate with the cavity of the zooid by the canals.

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  • As the buds develop the canal system becomes much extended, and calcareous tissue is deposited between the network of canals, the confluent edgezones of mother zooid and bud forming a coenosarc. As the process continues a number of calicles are formed, imbedded in a spongy tissue in which the canals ramify, and it is impossible to say where the theca of one corallite ends and that of another begins.

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  • Each zooid buds from the one immediately preceding it in the series, and intercommunication is effected by all the budding orifices (including that in the wall of the sicula) remaining permanently open.

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  • These caeca occur in birds (as in mammals) at the junction of the small with the large intestine; and while in ordinary perching-birds they are reduced to small nipplelike buds of no functional importance, in many other birds - owls for instance - they form quite long receptacles.

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  • In most species many of these buds, which alternate with the leaves, remain dormant, but in others the aerial shoots are copiously and repeatedly branched.

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  • The roots which arise from the base of the lateral buds remain undeveloped on the aerial stem.

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  • While a number of ferns can be multiplied vegetatively, by buds formed on the leaves and in other ways, the regular mode of propagation is by sowing the spores shed from the ripe sporangia.

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  • The winter months were Nivose, the snowy, Pluviose, the rainy, and Ventose, the windy month; then followed the spring months, Germinal, the month of buds, Floreal, the month of flowers, and Prairial, the month of meadows; and lastly the summer months, Messidor, the month of reaping, Thermidor, the month of heat, and Fructidor, the month of fruit.

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  • In addition to fruits of various kinds, they consume tender shoots and buds, insects, eggs and young birds.

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  • These two kinds of buds have a resemblance to each other as regards the arrangement and the development of their parts; and it sometimes happens, from injury and other causes, that the part of the axis which, in ordinary cases, would produce a leaf-bud, gives origin to a flower-bud.

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  • It has been maintained by some palaeobotanists that the aerial stems of Sigillaria arose as buds on a creeping rhizome, but the evidence for this conclusion is as yet unconvincing.

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  • Of course there could be books, plays and poems, but music is also able to tickle the laughter buds.

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  • Then try SPAR Bordeaux Rouge to tempt the taste buds!

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  • We offer excellent cuisine, with a great selection of authentic dishes to tantalize the taste buds.

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  • Examine each branch and look for a pair of leaves where there are two tiny dormant buds in the leaf axil.

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  • Spring How many sticky buds, candle ends sprout from the branches!

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  • Why are our taste buds drawn to the past?

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  • Simple pot pourri Put dried lavender buds in decorative bowls throughout your house.

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  • The first flower buds appear in spring are yellow, not red.

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  • The darling buds of May Meaning An appreciation of what is fresh and new.

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  • Net crops to reduce pigeon damage and to keep bullfinches off fruit buds.

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  • The buds have very large calyxes often with long dark stripes showing.

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  • A particularly dull autumn will produce less flower buds.

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  • A shortage of water at this time of year can cause flower buds to drop next spring before they open.

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  • However, it is possible to keep this solely for its beautiful foliage by removing the flower buds as they appear.

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  • Yet cold winters and late frosts often damage the flower buds and prevent blooming.

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  • In addition smaller flower buds emerge from the upper leaf joints.

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  • Mulch with spent mushroom compost in July-August when the new flower buds are being formed.

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  • Broccoli is a member of the cabbage family prized for its top crowns of tender, edible, green flower buds.

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  • Turn bulb timer to a 12/12 cycle & wait for your buds to start flowering.

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  • The difference is that panicle hydrangea flower buds are formed in late spring.

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  • When you crush the flowers and buds, they leave a magnificent deep magenta stain.

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  • This as expected creates offshoots from the dormant buds on the stem.

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  • Rhizome buds may remain dormant or develop into aerial shoots or new rhizome buds may remain dormant or develop into aerial shoots or new rhizomes.

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  • Of course the young tree saplings too had problems caused by having their buds chewed off by birds or grazing animals.

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  • You are really getting the taste buds going there.

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  • These papillae have taste buds in the medial walls of the cleft.

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  • Dining When it comes time to tantalize the taste buds, the resort's two restaurants offer the choicest Asian and European Delicacies.

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  • You will find cuisine to suit most taste buds and prices that will suit a range of budgets.

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  • Cheese and Ham Risotto - the mild creamy flavor will appeal to young taste buds.

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  • So the more papillae that you have, the more taste buds.

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  • Together they hit different taste buds, and that provides a better sensation.

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  • The plasma membrane envelopes the particle and buds off to form an intracellular vesicle, the phagosome.

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  • While in Rhabdopleura the buds remain in organic continuity with the parent, in Cephalodiscus they become free at an early stage, and the coenoecium accordingly contains a number of separate individuals.

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  • Schepotieff (1907) states that in the young buds of the latter the central part of the alimentar y canal is developed from cells which are apparently not of ectodermic origin.

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  • The broad deeply-sinuated leaves with blunt rounded lobes are of a peculiar yellowish colour when the buds unfold in May, but assume a more decided green towards midsummer, and eventually become rather dark in tint; they do not change to their brown autumnal hue until late in October, and on brushwood and saplings the withered foliage is often retained until the spring.

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  • Thus in Cunina octonaria, the ovum develops into an actinula which buds daughteractinulae; all of them, both parent and offspring, develop into medusae, so that there is no alternation of generations, but only larval multiplication.

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  • In Cunina and allied genera the actinula, formed in the manner described, has a hypostome of great length, quite disproportionate to the size of the body, and is further endowed with the power of producing buds from a stolon arising from the aboral side of the body.

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  • In former days this was the prevalent poplar in Britain, and the timber was employed for the purposes to which that of other species is applied, but has been superseded by P. monilifera and its varieties; it probably furnished the poplar wood of the Romans, which, from its lightness and soft tough grain, was in esteem for shield-making; in continental Europe it is still in some request; the bark, in Russia, is used for tanning leather, while in Kamchatka it is sometimes ground up and mixed with meal; the gum secreted by the buds was employed by the old herbalists for various medicinal purposes, but is probably nearly inert; the cotton-like down of the seed has been converted into a kind of vegetable felt, and has also been used in paper-making.

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  • Trees, of which the young buds are nipped by frost, would frequently not suffer material injury, were it not that the small frost-cracks serve as points of entry for Fungi; and numerous cases are known where even high temperatures can be endured on rich, deep, retentive soils by plants which at once succumb to drought on shallow or non-retentive soils.

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  • Grapholitha) eat the buds or the roots (e.g.

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  • If matters are propitious to the development of these buds, then a tuft of twigs is formed and no burr; but if the incipient twigs are also destroyed at an early stage, new buds are again formed, and in larger numbers than before, and the continued repetition of these processes leads to a sort of conglomerate woody mass of fused bud-bases, not dead, but unable to grow Out, and thus each contributing a crowded portion of woody material as it slowly grows.

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  • Such cankers often commence in mere insect punctures, frosted buds, cracks in the cortex, &c., into which a germinating spore sends its hypha.

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  • The conversion of the posterior end of the simple individual into a sexual region is dispensed with; but from a preanal budding segment a series of sexual buds are produced.

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  • The young shoots from these buds are to be gently brought to a horizontal position, by bending them a little at a time, and tied in, and usually opposite about the fourth leaf the rudiments of a bunch will be developed.

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  • One view, the monozoic, regards the whole development as a prolonged metamorphosis; another, the polyzoic view, considers that not only is the Cestode a colony, the proglottides being produced asexually, but that the scolex which buds off these individuals is itself a bud produced by the spherical embryo or onchosphere.

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  • Shelley's "The Boat on the Serchio," 117, "woods of stunted fir" for "pine" which the rhyme requires; Prince Athanase, 250, "And sea buds burst beneath the waves serene" for "under."

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  • Pyramidal and bush trees out of doors are, of course, suffered to become somewhat larger, and sufficient wood must be allowed to grow to give them the form desired; but after the first year or two, when the framework is laid out, they are permitted to extend very slowly, and never to any great extent, while the young growths are continually nipped off, so as to clothe the branches with fruit buds as closely placed as will permit of their healthy development.

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  • I clapped my chubby hands for joy when I saw that the rose-bushes were covered with lovely buds.

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  • Frames and hive parts are glued together by the bees with propolis - a sticky resinous substance collected from trees and buds.

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  • For example, removing the mite swollen buds from blackcurrants will help prevent reversion virus.

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  • Rhizome buds may remain dormant or develop into aerial shoots or new rhizomes.

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  • There is fresh rotisserie chicken to tempt the taste buds.

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  • Also, our taste buds get used to high levels of salt, so you might not notice the saltiness of some foods.

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  • Find something to tickle your taste buds and create a stir with your party guests from our fun range of saucy edibles.

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  • Notice the sepals (modified flower leaves) which curve up around the purple unopened buds.

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  • Solanum crispum " Glasnevin " has been flowering since last month, and its display continues unabated, with more buds still to bloom.

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  • Any buds which appear crushed or compressed, which contain seeds or which have a stale smell, are probably misrepresented imported bush.

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  • Simply cut back all the previous season 's growth to the lowest pair of buds where it joins the main stubby framework of branches.

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  • Small in size, big in flavor they always get the taste buds going.

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  • Dining When it comes time to tantalize the taste buds, the resort 's two restaurants offer the choicest Asian and European Delicacies.

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  • Discerning taste buds in this unique of the island 's.

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  • Virginia, from Loch Fyne in Argyll, tantalizes our taste buds with a superb selection of fresh seafood.

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  • But for one at least, it merely served to whet the taste buds.

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  • Arrange the sock buds into a corsage by pulling the wires together and taping them.

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  • Insert flowers and leaves between sock buds.

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  • Connect the buds to the leaves with more wire and tape.

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  • However, the sturgeon is now endangered, so caviar lovers have turned their taste buds elsewhere.

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  • So, in addition to considering the flavor you like best, you also may want to keep track of how expensive it will be to please your taste buds.

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  • When ready to make a purchase, check the flower stems to see if they are freshly cut and if the leaves and buds are still firm.

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  • Stolichnaya, Grey Goose, Skyy and, if you are not working on a budget, Chopin can all help your create the perfect martini, depending on your taste buds.

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  • When left to flower, the blossoms shoot up from the middle stalk and form small white buds.

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  • Since flowering basil plants tend to stop producing foliage, it is important to continually harvest the leaves and pinch any buds that form so the leaves continue to flourish.

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  • Taper candles/pillar candles - just be sure to pick unscented as scented candles can affect your taste buds and ruin your delicious meal!

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  • Patterns of tiny rose buds mixed with larger floral designs all come together in an authentic feel for the Victorian era.

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  • Stretch your imagination, and your taste buds; try something new.

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  • From tartar to well-done, cooking steak to perfection is achieved by proper timing, use of proper cooking utensils, and following your taste buds.

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  • After you have signed in, it is easy to create your own recipe box by simply striking the My Recipe Box whenever you find a recipe that suits your fancy (and taste buds).

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  • Fat adds flavor to food and leaves a feel good sensation on your taste buds.

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  • Many salmon filet recipes are available that will tickle the taste buds of people with all different tastes.

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  • Building your comfort zone and becoming more relaxed is a certain road to some great new buds.

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  • You can still be buds with this boy---but in the short term, stay busy doing other things with other people so you can get your mind off him and not have to listen to him pine away about other girls.

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  • Okay I've been thinking of bunches of Valentine's Day gifts for my buds, but I keep having to rethink since I keep telling myself this is too much or not good enough.

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  • Embellishments-For additional elegance, other additions to the corsage could include lavender sprigs, baby's breath, tiny rose buds and more.

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  • Girls initially develop breast buds, which are small lumps that form under the nipples.

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  • Your taste buds actually become more sensitive as well.

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  • Here you'll find a great Vegan diet foods list and other healthy food resources that will tempt your taste buds as well as ingredient choices to make great vegan meals!

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  • While the classic chocolate truffle appeals to many couples, there is a wide range of truffle flavors and rich combinations to tickle any taste buds.

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  • You are also within easy reach of signature American entertainment such as the Carolina Opry and Dolly Parton's Dixie Stampede, not to mention countless restaurants to appease any taste buds.

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  • Smaller blooms, buds instead of full blooms, or fewer blooms may be used.

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  • This may also include buds, petals, or small flowers to scatter on the cake table for additional decorations.

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  • Peonies are another traditional and feminine choice for late summer weddings, and unopened or partially opened buds are especially pretty.

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  • Brides who live in California, Florida, or Hawaii should have little trouble finding tropical buds, but Midwestern brides may need to plan farther ahead for these.

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  • Altered taste/smell - Over time, the use of chewing tobacco can significantly affect the sense of smell, as well as the taste buds.

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  • You can insert a floral wire in the bottom in order to build a spray of buds, or you can attach buds directly to your cake.

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  • It should be as soft and delicate as the first buds of the season.

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  • Once per voyage, the midnight Dessert Extravaganza is not to be missed as mountains of elegant treats are on display to please the eye as well as the taste buds.

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  • Instead of tempting human taste buds with a variety of flavorful names, Orijen sticks to their "Biologically Appropriate" concept by dividing their diets according to your pet's needs through different life stages.

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  • The color is a gentian blue; the buds of a deeper hue.

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  • It may be used in vases and hanging baskets, the pink buds being pretty.

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  • Individual canes grow vegetatively for one year, initiate flower buds in late summer, fruit the following summer, then die.

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  • Cretan Mullein (Celsia) - C. cretica is a pretty plant, allied to the Mulleins, with rich yellow flowers and polished buds; may be treated as an annual.

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  • Strong bulbs will give three spikes in one season, eack spike bearing twelve to twenty pink flowers 6 inches across, with buds a deeper red, and opening in succession, so that the display lasts for some weeks.

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  • The first crop can be obtained from pots or boxes in the greenhouse, and these will be followed by fully formed and bursting buds, in sheltered and sunny places.

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  • These buds will open large, fresh, and fair if placed in pots of water in a warm greenhouse or a sunny frame or window.

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  • In cutting Daffodils or Narcissi for indoor decoration, cut the flowers, when the buds are opening, or even just before, and let the stalks be long, as the flowers group better with long stalks.

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  • For cutting, H. flava, minor, and Dumortieri are useful, the flowers lasting a few days and the buds opening well in water.

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  • T. cordifolia bears little starry creamy-white flowers, the buds delicately tinged with pink, a well-flowered mass seen a few yards off having a close likeness to a wreath of foam.

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  • The flowers expand as rounded clusters of good size in the latter part of April, though the buds are formed early the previous autumn.

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  • Though uninjured at Kew during recent winters, the plant is still on trial as to its hardiness in this country, and might possibly lose its buds in a severe winter.

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  • It comes into flower and leaf so early that the buds, and often the young leaves, are injured by late frosts; otherwise there may be a lovely bloom.

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  • It is a shy flowerer, and many of its buds go blind, so that half the stock should be transplanted every year in August.

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  • The buds are shapely, of a clear buff yellow, opening as large single flowers of pale creamy-white.

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  • The small white flowers are borne in dense clusters in early summer, the unopened buds being of a delicate pink hue, and it is suited for grouping with diminutive shrubs, such as the Partridge Berry, Daphne Cneorum, the small Andromedas.

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  • They expand in early autumn, but are formed long before they open, and a pretty feature of the buds is a fine network of silky-white threads.

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  • When large flowers are desired the soil must be rich, and the buds thinned out.

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  • Its broad hairy leaves are a pretty bronze or purple color while young, and the hairy stems of 9 to 12 inches carry long-stemmed rosy-purple buds opening as blue and white flowers.

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  • Though not much above medium size, they are conspicuous, rising well out of the water, and the long pointed buds open early in the day.

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  • However, the flower buds can be damaged from late frosts.

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  • It isn't a good idea to repot a new gardenia because it will probably go into shock and drop all its buds.

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  • Failure to provide the right temperatures results in failure to form buds.

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  • The resulting ice crystals draw moisture out of the plant's leaves, flowers or buds, resulting in wilting, brown spots, or permanent damage.

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  • Most of them have many sets of leaves and often contain buds or flowers.

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  • In the spring, seeds, leaf buds and pollen accumulate and cause fungi to grow and attract bugs.

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  • Most guards are more effective against large leaves than they are against seeds and buds.

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  • Whether spread on perfectly toasted bread or melted and used as a sauce over lemon sorbet, organic raspberry spread tingles the taste buds and adds zing anytime.

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  • The best varieties of tea are grown at high altitudes and use hand picked buds and young leaves.

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  • Hemp oil is made from the seeds of the Cannabis Sativa plant, not the buds - just like hemp fabric is made from the natural fibers of the plant's stalk.

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  • It may take some time to reacquaint your taste buds to real flavor.

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  • Artichokes affect your taste buds to enhance sweet flavors, altering the flavor of the wine.

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  • If you like Rombauer, as just about every American does and every critic with French trained buds does not, then you will also love this wine.

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  • The Chuckwagon Diner website has a special campfire recipes section sure to delight your taste buds.

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  • Just as new higher-grade ear buds and headphones provide better sound quality over the inexpensive earphones that come "free" with MP3 players and iPods, the same can be said about music phones.

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  • The difference, however, is that standard ear buds and headphones will not work directly with most cell phones as they must also have an in-line microphone for you to take voice calls.

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  • If a girl does not have breast buds or pubic hair, which is the first signs of puberty, by age 14, there may be other medical problems.

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  • Tooth buds, ears, and eyelids form and the groundwork is in place for your baby's organs.

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  • By week 22, your baby weighs about one pound and his/her taste buds have developed.

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  • Sexual differentiation occurs, and there are buds for the baby's future teeth.

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  • As the form reaches the end of the embryonic stage, arm and leg buds grow longer, and hands and feet regions can be identified.

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  • Taste buds set for rotisserie meat or chicken?

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  • When the wax has cooled, pop the wax cubes out and melt them again, this time adding a whole little brick of wax buds.

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  • But there are a number of wonderful sites on the Internet that can offer you tons of different kinds of fragrances, which are sure to pique your imagination and your taste buds.

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  • Dried rose buds are a good choice for romantic themes such as a wedding or engagement party.

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  • A properly sheared tree will show live buds at the end of each branch, ready for the next growing season.

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  • Listen to Christmas music online at home or work without interrupting others by hooking ear buds or headphones into the speaker system.

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  • That said, once you have the feel for a recipe, it is okay to play with the ingredients and find a combination that works for your family and pleases your taste buds.

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  • It is in spring that buds bloom, birds sin, and all seems fresh and clean.

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  • A rose tattoo meant to convey this message might consist of white rose buds linked around your ankle with a trailing vines.

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  • Fast food and all-night diners are readily available, but depending on how long your trip is, they can begin to take their toll on your taste buds and your health.

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  • Treat your taste buds to a sampling of the regional cuisines.

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  • Because people have taste buds for each of these, a meal will be satisfying if they are all included.

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  • There are tens of thousands of taste buds in our mouths, some seeking a bitter taste, some a tart taste, and then there is the sweet taste.

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  • With recipes such as Baja Shrimp, Grecian Mushrooms, and French Apple Cake, your taste buds will be delighted and thankful.

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  • Get creative with your blender-- your taste buds will thank you!

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  • Don't be afraid to try new foods that assault your taste buds with flavor.

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  • Many whole grain products are available; choose the ones that tempt your taste buds and give you the most nutrition bang for your buck.

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  • They satisfy taste buds as well as hunger while feeding your body on a cellular level.

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  • These foods may tickle your taste buds, but do not offer the benefits of whole foods like fruits, vegetables and whole grain snacks, which pack a nutritional punch and leave you fuller, longer.

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  • In some cases it will also take retraining your taste buds.

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  • Not every recipe is the perfect fit with everyone's taste buds.

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  • If she's only developed breast buds and doesn't require real support, she needs to get used to the feeling of wearing this undergarment.

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  • I could even let it dangle from the ear buds while listening to music!

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  • From the sweet potato casserole to the fried catfish and cornbread, the taste buds go crazy when eating the delicious meals prepared at this restaurant.

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  • Chicken and seafood entrees are also on the menu and the choices are sure to guarantee there is something to satisfy everyone's taste buds.

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  • Look for monthly and seasonal steak specials celebrating seasonal harvest to also satisfy your taste buds.

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  • A treat for the taste buds and an entertaining night on the town, this restaurant is sure to become a fast favorite as you delight in rolling up your sleeves and demonstrating your culinary skills.

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  • Give your taste buds a burst of excitement by trying new cuisine.

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  • A slow waltz began playing and she closed her eyes, imagining the bright sunlight and flowers bursting from swollen buds.

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  • Anger crossed through eyes as green as spring buds.

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  • The food of this species seems to consist of the seeds and buds of many sorts of trees, though the staple may very possibly be those of some kind of pine.

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  • The buds may all become detached after a time and give rise to separate and independent individuals, as in the common Hydra, in which only polyp-individuals are produced and sexual elements From Allman's Gymnoblastic Hydroids, by permission of are developed the Council of the Ray Society.

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  • Thus the typical hydroid colony starts from a " founder " polyp, which in the vast majority of cases is fixed, but which may be floating, as in Nemopsis, Pelagohydra, &c. The founder-polyp usually produces by budding polyp-individuals, and these in their turn produce other buds.

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  • In the first place, buds may be produced only from the hydrorhiza, which grows out and branches to form a basal stolon, typically net-like, spreading over the substratum to which the founderpolyp attached itself.

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  • Buds may be produced from the manubrium, radial canals, ring-canal, or tentaclebases, or from an aboral stolon (Narcomedusae).

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  • In any case the daughter-individuals produced from the buds may be imagined as remaining attached to the parent and forming a colony of individuals in organic connexion with one another, and thus three possible cases arise.

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  • It is convenient to distinguish buds that give rise to polyps from those that form medusae.

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  • The budding of this medusa has been worked out in detail by Chun (Hydrozoa, [1]), to whom the reader must be referred for the interesting laws of budding regulating the sequence and order of formation of the buds.

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  • The buds of Margellium are produced on the manubrium in each of the four interradii, and they arise from the ectoderm, that is to say, the germinal epithelium, which later gives rise to the gonads.

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  • In Cunina parasitica, however, the ovum develops into an actinula, which buds actinulae as before, but only the daughter-actinulae develop into medusae, while the original, parent-actinula dies off; here, therefore, larval budding has led to a true alternation of generations.

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  • A " stolon " of unknown origin produces thirty-two buds, which become as many Polypodia; each has twenty-four tentacles and divides by fission repeated twice into four individuals, each with six tentacles.

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  • Ocelli are seen at the base of the tentacles, and also (as an exception) groups of medusiform buds.

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  • The medusae, on the other hand, have the tentacles in four tufts of (in the buds) five each, and thus resemble the medusae of the family Margelidae.

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  • At the same time it produces buds from an aboral stolon.

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  • The buds become medusae by the direct method of budding described above.

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  • In some cases the buds do not become detached at once, but the stolon continues to grow and to produce more buds, forming a " bud-spike " (Knospencihre), which consists of the axial stolon bearing medusa-buds in all stages of development.

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  • It buds medusae from the margin of the mouth in May and June, and in August and September the gonads' are formed in the place where the buds arose.

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  • Chun and Woltereck, on the other hand, regard the stem as a stolo prolifer arising from the aboral pole, that is to say, from the ex-umbrella, similar to that which grows out from the ex-umbral surface of the embryo of the Narcomedusae and produces buds, a view which is certainly supported by the embryological evidence to be adduced shortly.

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  • Woltereck considers the siphonophores most nearly allied to the Narcomedusae, producing like the buds from an aboral stolon, the first bud being represented by the pneumatophore or protocodon, in different cases.

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  • The Siphonula produced buds on the manubrium, as many Anthomedusae are known to do, and these by reduction or dislocation of parts gave rise to the various appendages of the colony.

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  • In these northern habitats it attains a large size; the wood is very soft; the buds yield a gum-like balsam, from which the common name is derived; considered valuable as an.

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  • The hind limbs appear as buds at the base of the tail, and gradually attain their full development during the tadpole life.

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  • Then, stores of food-material being accumulated at the injured place, other buds arise at the base of or around the injured one.

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  • The buds and ieaves on the exposed side are probably killed by sand blasts.

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  • Similarly bud-scales can be caused to develop into foliage-leaves, if the buds to which they belong are caused to grow out in the year of, their formation by the removal of the existing foliage-leaves.

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  • The trees have usually a straight trunk, and a tendency to a conical or pyramidal growth, throwing out each year a more or less regular whorl of branches from the foot of the leading shoot, while the buds of the lateral boughs extend horizontally.

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  • A decoction of the buds in milk or whey is a common household remedy for scurvy; and the young shoots or green cones form an essential ingredient in the spruce-beer drank with a similar object, or as an occasional beverage.

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  • The well-known "Danzig-spruce" is prepared by adding a decoction of the buds or cones to the wort or saccharine liquor before fermentation.

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  • The American "essence of spruce," occasionally used in England for making spruce-beer, is obtained by boiling the shoots and buds and concentrating the decoction.

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  • After awhile he went nearer, and looking closely at the buds, found that they were folded up, leaf over leaf, as eyelids are folded over sleeping eyes, so that Birdie thought they must be asleep.

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  • It is Nature's own bird which lives on buds and diet drink.

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  • Listen to what your taste buds are telling you.

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  • But though I do not know what causes the cold winds to blow when the oak buds unfold, I cannot agree with the peasants that the unfolding of the oak buds is the cause of the cold wind, for the force of the wind is beyond the influence of the buds.

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  • A considerable part of the alimentary canal is said to be derived from the ectoderm in the buds of both Cephalodiscus and Rhabdopleura.

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