Privet Sentence Examples

privet
  • The insects feed upon ash, lilac, privet and jasmine leaves.

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  • Depending on where you live, this could include privet.

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  • However, privet in flower is seldom sufficiently abundant for this to occur.

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  • The Guardian Nature notes The sweet, slightly acrid scent of privet pervades the streets from garden hedges.

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  • Can you recommend the best way to remove brambles which are growing in with a box privet hedge please?

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  • Nurserymen have found that the Phillyraea unites readily with Privet, so that nearly all their stock is grafted, and the plants die out just as they should be in full beauty.

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  • The Osmanthuses may all be propagated by cuttings, and although it takes longer to obtain plants on their own roots they are much to be preferred to those grafted on the privet.

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  • Between the rising swells of long-leaf pine lands are impenetrable thickets of hawthorn, holly, privet, plane trees and magnolias.

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  • In privet also the leaves fall after the production of new ones in the next year.

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  • In the privet (Ligustrum vulgare) there are numerous racemes of dichasia arranged in a racemose manner along an axis; the whole inflorescence thus has an appearance not unlike a bunch of grapes, and has been called a thyrsus.

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  • The lower slopes looked more grassy than normal after the rain and there was still discarded chopped down Privet laying about.

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  • Each house had to have a neatly trimmed privet hedge in front and an apple tree in the back garden!

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  • If you buy lilac be sure that it is grafted either on its own stock or on privet stock.

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  • Hawthorn is the best hedge, followed by holly, yew and wild privet.

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  • The golden privet behind the seat in the garden was a real focal point.

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  • You can normally buy green privet or golden privet and can sometimes also get silver privet.

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  • The larvae feed on wild and garden privet and saplings of Ash, Lilac and Guelder rose.

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  • The insects feed upon ash, lilac, privet and jasmine leaves, and are found more rarely on elder, rose, apple and poplar trees.

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  • Smaller hedges may be formed of evergreen privet or of tree-box.

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