Sinónimos
Examples for "pigweed"
Examples for "pigweed"
1Raw they ate thistle tops, pigweed, and crowfoot, with great relish.
2Pull up all the beets and leave the pigweed, hey?
3The grass waved to their stirrups, and the pigweed stood rank up to the very door.
4Even pigweed can be a delicacy.
5Should I get more pigweed seeds?
1This is goosefoot, to wrap the roast in when I put it away.
2The little black seeds come from a plant I call goosefoot, but it has a different Zelandonii name.
3The Armenian's great courtyard, overgrown with goosefoot and wild mallows, was lively and full of gaiety in spite of the great heat.
4Goosefoot, knotweed, little barley, and maygrass had tiny seeds, with volumes only one-tenth that of wheat and barley seeds.
5The Goosefoot herbs are common weeds in most temperate climates, and grow chiefly in salt marshes, or on the sea-shore.
1Women with wood on their heads and marog ( wild spinach) in their hip pockets.
2We marvelled at the birds, we picked the wild spinach and fennel and imagined the Lusitania's drift to calamity a few miles offshore.
1To-day he stood forth with confidence and told about a fat hen.
2Among these was a foolish, fat hen who lived in Farmer Green's henhouse.
3Watched a regal python constrict a fat hen before consuming it.
4If I could have just one fat hen that is all I would ask.
5It was a nice fat hen; it winked with one eye, and looked very artful.
1Even my cultivated gardens have great annual weeds that I harvest young and mix in salads, including lamb's quarters, chickweed, and pigweed.
2There was nothing there-eventhe ruins are overgrown with lamb'squarters-butPolly went straight to the spot.
3We also found on the isle a sort of scurvy-grass, and a plant, called by us Lamb's Quarters, which, when boiled, eat like spinnage.
Translations for Chenopodium album