To Linnaeus this commonoak of Europe was all of one species.
2
"We can easily do that by using the chips of the commonoak tree or the charcoal can be used, as I have before stated."
1
AcH 505 in both the presence and the absence of pedunculateoak microcuttings.
2
But the good old pedunculateoak stands green as it was a month ago.
3
The trees that grow in this sandstone gorge - pedunculateoak, elm, ash and hazel -are remnants of woodlands that were once more extensive.
4
Their future as pedunculateoaks you can envisage.
1
Those of Quercusrobur and Zea mays were highly sensitive to contact, as were the radicles of the latter to caustic.
2
Our British oak ( Quercusrobur) has twenty-eight varieties; Quercus Lusitanica has eleven; Quercus calliprinos has ten; and Quercus coccifera eight.
3
Thus Quercusrobur has twenty-eight varieties, all of which, excepting six, are clustered round three sub-species, namely Q. pedunculata, sessiliflora and pubescens.
4
Quercusrobur: tracks left on inclined smoked glass-plates by tips of radicles in growing downwards.
5
Quercusrobur: radicle with square of card attached to one side of apex, causing it to become hooked.
Uso de English oak em inglês
1
One of the best selections of ancient Englishoak in the country.
2
First up was an Englishoak marriage box with internal candle holder.
3
The stem is of Englishoak, and the gunwale of American elm.
4
If he were a tree, it would surely be an Englishoak.
5
The grand old Englishoak and elm are magnificent trees, in park or hedge-row here.
6
Custom-built bookshelves of limed Englishoak lined two walls.
7
Good Englishoak, that's kept them so fine.
8
Norway fir nor Englishoak can resist forever the insidious assaults of the seemingly conquered ocean.
9
The door was made of strong Englishoak.
10
These sticks were of no great length, some fifteen feet at the most, of sound Englishoak.
11
There is one other Englishoak in the Park planted a few years ago, which is doing fine.
12
I found myself in a lofty antique hall, the roof supported by massive joists of old Englishoak.
13
They gathered around a table made of Englishoak, cut and polished before the era of great cathedrals.
14
The camphor-laurel, which is about the size of an Englishoak, is the most important of these trees.
15
It somewhat resembles the Englishoak in its trunk, branches, and the great mass of foliage which it carries.
16
The Englishoak, though strong and durable, was not considered generally suitable for finer work in the sixteenth century.