I have got him now-anEnglish bluedevil in a German inside.
2
He looked around, a slightly puzzled expression on his bluedevil's face.
3
Your English climates sometimes gives your English bluedevil to foreign mens like me.
4
There's not enough powder left to make a bluedevil.
5
Suddenly he froze, and there was a quizzical expression on his bluedevil's face.
1
Blue-weed, or viper'sbugloss; travels of; description of.
2
One of these includes the forget-me-nots, the borage, the alkanet, and the viper'sbugloss, which keep up this blue as a family heirloom.
3
The angle of a field by the woods on the eastern side of the heath, the entire corner, is blue in July with viper'sbugloss.
4
Here were the thorn-apple, chenopodium, sow-thistle, wild mustard, redweed, viper'sbugloss, and others, both native and introduced, in dense thickets five or six feet high.
5
Viper'sbugloss, which grows so freely by the heath, was so called because anciently it was thought to yield an antidote to the adder's venom.
1
This holds good with Euonymus, Rhamnus catharticus, Ilex, Fragaria, all or at least most of the before-named Labiatae, Scabiosa atro-purpurea, and Echiumvulgare.
2
Echiumvulgare, a humbug, merely a case like Thymus.
Ús de blue thistle en anglès
1
To the butterfly-proboscisof Siebenkäs, enough honey-cellswere still open in every bluethistle-blossom of destiny.
2
The beaches are long and sandy, lined with tamarisks, bluethistles, dune pinks and rabbit-tail grass.
3
The wedding bouquet featured Lily of the Valley, Stephanotis pips, hints of baby bluethistles, white spray roses and trailing ivy.
4
A war drum was leading the chant, and as Vaylo looked on a standard was raised: the Bloody BlueThistle of Dhoone.
5
The road that had been so long trodden by devout pilgrims was overgrown with furze and heather, and the bluethistles of the sands.