Motherwort, catnip, plantain, tansy, wildmustard,-whata homely human look they have!
2
Poplars whiten, and wildmustard towers on both sides of the path in fragrant yellow clusters.
3
Recommends the wildmustard as an aperient.
4
The long stems of the wildmustard swayed and parted, and out sprang a figure, which ran straight towards the two young men.
5
The wildmustard glowed so like a golden carpet, that the destroying hand of the anxious farmer seemed of the blundering tyranny of labour.
6
The seeds of the wildmustard, like those of the plantain and other weeds, get in with the grain seed and so cause constant trouble.
7
Here were the thorn-apple, chenopodium, sow-thistle, wildmustard, redweed, viper's bugloss, and others, both native and introduced, in dense thickets five or six feet high.
8
Many of the vegetables we ate before the arrival of the potato, such as globe artichokes and charlock ( wildmustard), are rarely seen nowadays.
9
"No, I dunno's I ever did," replied Abner, twitching up an enterprising wildmustard.