The Empress was gorgeous in yellow tulle covered with lace and jewels.
2
The mother is in black, a mellow reception robe, tulle and lace.
3
And who doesn't need a see through tulle jumpsuit for next spring?
4
Now that that was decided, I contemplated the popular tulle tutu options.
5
Warmth blew in off the water, tugging the tulle off my shoulders.
1
It is not much cultivated; amaranthus is almost the only crop grown.
2
She read about heliotrope and amaranthus and lilies.
3
Ione walked towards it down the amaranthus-lined path from the nearest of the campus's five tube stations, three serjeant bodyguards in tow.
4
This plant is a native of the East Indies; and in height, color, and general habit, resembles the Chinese Amaranthus.
5
The Amaranthus cristatus (Celosia castrensis, L.) is probably a native, being found commonly in the interior of the Batta country, where strangers have rarely penetrated.
1
In the northern counties the poplar, on account of its bitter bark, was termed the bitter-weed.
1
He tossed the dead match into a clump of thornyweed.
2
But the cement walks were crumbling, the trees had died, and rank thornyweeds choked about their roots.
3
Peering through a clump of thornyweeds, Perrin saw only the same rolling plain that lay behind them.
4
Seventy-two steps, cut out in the rock, and covered with thornyweeds and moss, are the beginning of the ascent to the Bagh caves.
Ús de fox tail en anglès
1
The foxtail fad is passing in the East, and Mr.
2
The cocoon is a big, baggy one, and it is as red as foxtail.
3
Peacock feather and foxtail dusters are fitted with buck horn handles or those made of fox or wild cat paws.
4
To the handle bars, where boys customarily fasten a beaver of foxtail, there was the tail of a silver fox.
5
The New Yorker, November 20, 1937 P. 13 Lengthy talk story about foxtails and rabbits' feet.