Citron Sentence Examples

citron
  • The common fruits are the date, orange, citron, fig, grape, apricot, peach and banana.

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  • Among economic plants should be mentioned the coffee, cacao, citron, cinnamon, cocoanut and rubber tree.

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  • Gum-producing and kola trees are abundant, and there are many fruit trees, the orange and citron growing well in the Susu and Futa Jallon districts.

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  • The citron, sour orange, lemon and lime grow wild; but the apple and peach do not come to perfection.

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  • The shores, especially on the Tyrthenian Sea, present almost a continued grove of olive, orange, lemon and citron trees, which attain a size unknown in the north of Italy.

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  • The process of expression is applicable to the obtaining of essential oils which are contained in the rind or skin of the fruits belonging to the citron family, such as orange and lemon oils.

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  • The chief products are rice, cotton, sugar, a little silk, and fruits in great variety, including several kinds of the orange, lemon and citron.

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  • It covers how to grow pummelo, kumquat, citron, calamondin, citrangequats, trifoliate orange, and sour orange.

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  • Madonna Nudes 1979 for Men contains top notes of olive blossom, citron and grapefruit peel; middle notes of cardamom, star anise and Tonka bean; and base notes of musk, tobacco and teak.

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  • It comes in unique color combinations such as grey frames with citron accents and yellow mirror lenses as well as more traditional looks such as a black or tortoise frame.

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  • There are several variations available such as Black Frame with Polarized Grey Lens, Brown Frame with Polarized Brown Lens, Slate Citron Frame with Yellow Mirror Lens and Cement Yellow Frame with Platinum Lens.

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  • Striped nightgowns are found in any color, but one of the best combinations for the season is a candy-striped mix of citron and pink.

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  • The scent itself is perfectly youthful, with notes of blueberry, citron, pineapple and vanilla intermingling with musk and woods.

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  • Besides these are grown melons, mulberries, bananas, apricots, quinces, walnuts, lemons and citron.

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  • Much of the neighbouring plain is very fertile, and the town is surrounded with gardens and orchards, in which orange, lemon and citron come to great perfection.

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  • The apple, pear, cherry and plum thrive well in the north; the orange, lemon, citron and sugar-cane in the south; styrax and mastic in the south-west; and the wheat lands of the Sivas vilayet can hardly be surpassed.

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  • Certain of these oils consist very largely of hydrocarbons; for example, those of turpentine, citron, thyme, orange, pine-needle, goldenrod (from Solidago canadensis) and cypress, while others contain as their chief constituents various alcoholic and ketonic substances.

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  • The essential oil of tea is of a citron yellow colour; it is lighter than water and possesses the distinctive odour of tea.

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  • It was the Calamus aromaticus of the medieval druggists and perhaps of the ancients, though the latter has been referred by some to the Citron grass, Andropogon Nardus.

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  • Jewish shekels were first coined by Simon the Hasmonean, probably in 139-138 B.C. These bear inscriptions in the archaic Hebrew and various emblems, such as the cup or chalice, the lily branch with three flowers, the candlestick, the citron and palm branch and so forth.

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  • Hundreds of acres of wheat are lost annually in America by the ravages of the Hessian fly; the fruit flies of Australia and South Africa cause much loss to orange and citron growers, often making it necessary to cover the trees in muslin tents for protection.

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  • The former attacks apple and pear; the latter, which selects orange and citron, was introduced into America from Australia, and carried ruin before it in some orange districts until its natural enemy, the lady-bird beetle, Vedalia cardinalis, was also imported.

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