We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
He saw Ellie May peering at him from behind the chinaberry tree.
2
The grandmother took her accustomed position behind a chinaberry tree, looking and listening.
3
Ellie May stood behind a chinaberry tree, looking around the trunk at Lov.
4
Dude snickered and stood behind a chinaberry tree so nobody could see him.
5
How small it looks with no house, no carhouse, no chinaberry trees, she thought.
1
We next went out to collect the pots we had hung up on the seringa trees.
2
The seringa, or India-rubber-tree, grows plentifully in some parts of Brazil, and many hundreds of the inhabitants are employed in the manufacture of shoes.
3
He then covered the moulds to a sufficient thickness with the seringa juice, and dried them in the smoke as our shoes had been.
4
The Seringa or India-Rubber Tree.
5
"These are seringa trees," said Uncle Paul, pointing them out.
1
The box, containing those of the left was of purple Azedarach.
2
The white cedar (Melia Azedarach) grows also along Zamia Creek, with casuarina, and a species of Leptospermum.
1
A noble prideofIndia {Footnote: China tree: the melia azedaracha of botanists.
2
I would not even wish the straggling PrideofIndia, and over-abundant lantana, away from this fairest of the island Edens.
1
West Indianlilac berries were terribly bitter.
2
"West Indianlilac." Harding nodded.
1
He saw Ellie May peering at him from behind the chinaberrytree.
2
The grandmother took her accustomed position behind a chinaberrytree, looking and listening.
3
Ellie May stood behind a chinaberrytree, looking around the trunk at Lov.
4
Dude snickered and stood behind a chinaberrytree so nobody could see him.
5
Hildemara climbed the chinaberrytree, where she could keep watch.
1
The Persianlilac, which lifts high in air its gay flax-coloured branches.
2
The Persianlilac was very full and lasted a long time.
3
Persianlilacs, syringas, labernums made thickets here and there and covered their heads with bloom.
4
The Persianlilacs, weighed down with their heavy clusters of flowers, bent gracefully, like a row of courtiers.
5
S. PERSICA ( PersianLilac).-Persia ,1640
1
The mud was spotted here and there with the bright vermilion seeds from the beadtrees.
1
The old grandmother had gone behind a china- berrytree again, awed by the sight.
2
Ellie May continued to peer from behind the china- berrytree, trying to attract Lov's attention.
3
The hedges show also the crimson-tasselled fruit of the barberry, no less ornamental than the service- berrytree.
4
One fruit may puzzle strangers, it is the red berry of the cultivated service berrytree, and makes excellent preserve.
5
Many times during the winter the sugar- berrytree was visited by a flock of cedar-birds that also wintered in the vicinity.
1
They feed on the berries of the dogwood, chinatree and mistletoe, and are the jolliest lot of birds it is possible to imagine.
2
A noble pride of India {Footnote: Chinatree: the melia azedaracha of botanists.
3
On reaching the yard, we rested a long time on a settee under a group of chinatrees.
4
The hall floor was covered to muffle the tread; not a sound reached her save the stirring of the Chinatrees outside.
5
Outside was a small stone balcony, and beyond it a fringe of Chinatrees and the fields, desolate and empty in the moonlight.
1
A northern whitecedar overshadowed the backyard, but there was no dog.
2
The whole is covered with a double roof of bark of whitecedar.
3
The others stood under an old whitecedar tree that shadowed all round.
4
These were constructed from the trunk of a single tree, usually whitecedar.
5
Thinner planks were made out of the whitecedar, which splits very freely.
Usage of Melia azedarach in English
1
The white cedar ( MeliaAzedarach) grows also along Zamia Creek, with casuarina, and a species of Leptospermum.