By sugar once was understood only the crystalized juice of the cane, (arundo saccharifera.)
3
He had found out the only bait in the world to catch so shy a carp as my father,-haaretletalis arundo.
4
He had found out the only bait in the world to catch so shy a carp as my father,-haeretlethalis arundo.
5
Some of the best permanent bedding masses are made of the various hardy ornamental grasses, as eulalias, arundo, and the like.
6
They were planted with the arundo and other vegetables of similar habits, protected against trespassers, and at last partly covered with forest trees.
7
For writing upon paper or parchment, the Romans employed a reed, sharpened and split in the point like our pens, called calamus, arundo, or canna.
8
The highest reeds* in the south of Europe (* Arundo donax.
9
Vast spaces of country clear of timber were under water, and covered with the common reed [Note: Arundo phragmites.
10
This consisted in little more than the planting of the Arundo arenaria, and other sand-plants, and the exclusion of animals destructive to those vegetables.
11
The great reed of the south, the Arundo donax, is often used, in the country, for rough garden-shelters against the mistral or just for fences.
12
The great reed of the south, Arundo donax, is often used, in the country, for making rough garden-shelters against the mistral or just for fences.
13
The lower grounds are divided into small enclosures by stone walls, and subdivided by rows of a tall stout reed (Arundo donax) resembling sugarcane.
14
* (* Arundo donax.)
15
It is a new genus, between aira and arundo.
16
By sugar once was understood only the crystalized juice of the cane, (arundo saccharifera.)