A common and long cultivated European herb from which most common garden pansies are derived.
Sinónimos
Examples for "heartsease "
Examples for "heartsease "
1 Averan looked up and, despite the heartsease , his words filled her with sadness.
2 Between that rose and this heartsease my poor child was ill.
3 Hadria carried still the drooping yellow heartsease that the little girl had given her.
4 Here was escape, heartsease , happiness-herein this bottled impishness.
5 Did you happen to notice the bed of heartsease ?
1 Oberon must have touched her eyes with the juice of Love-in-idleness .
2 "Now," said Oberon to this little sprite, "fetch me the flower called Love-in-idleness .
1 The commonest were wild pansy and forget-me-not, and the rhododendron grew in quantities.
2 Under the edge of the footpath through the wheat a wild pansy blooms.
3 Another gown was a forget-me-not, one a wild pansy , others peonies.
4 They are really a wild pansy .
5 They plucked some of the rich flowers, but also took with them the despised buttercup and the wild pansy .
1 Neither like an old family physician nor a new johnny - jump - up ; just quiet and cool and pleasant.
1 Lysimachia vulgaris, Euphrasia officinalis, Rhinanthus crista-galli, and Viola tricolor come under this head.
2 Nearly the same result followed with some crossed and self-fertilised plants of Viola tricolor .
3 Strictly analogous experiments with Viola tricolor and Lathyrus odoratus gave a very different result.
4 This was evidently the case with the crossed plants of Viola tricolor , which ultimately quite overwhelmed the self-fertilised.
5 In my first experiments on Viola tricolor I was unsuccessful in raising seedlings, and obtained only one full-grown crossed and self-fertilised plant.
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