It would be hard to find a color that wasn't matched by one sweetpea or another.
2
Look around you, sweetpea.
3
Sweetpea-I'min trouble, but I didn't want to ask you for money.
4
I'm sorry, Sweetpea, but I have to go back to the BookWorld.
5
Let's hope they have a bit more luck with those sweetpeas.
1
I lost my sweetpea this year to these strange looking insects.
2
All the above except sweetpea are quickly cut down by frost.
3
My garden will be just a patch of 'sturtiums and sweetpea.
4
He's mastered the sweetpea in a manner given to few.
5
He has unsuccessfully been trying to produce a yellow sweetpea.
1
Thirdly, the Sweet Pea ( Lathyrusodoratus) habitually fertilises itself in this country.
2
Strictly analogous experiments with Viola tricolor and Lathyrusodoratus gave a very different result.
3
I am very glad to hear about Lathyrusodoratus, for here in England the vars.
4
Mr. Galton has shown that this holds good with Lathyrusodoratus; as has Mr. A.J.
5
W.. Bateson has shown this to be the case for the sweet-pea ( Lathyrusodoratus), var.
6
Moreover, ycf4 has been lost from the chloroplast genome in Lathyrusodoratus and separately in three other groups of legumes.
7
The case therefore of Lathyrusodoratus or the sweet-pea is curious, for in this country it seems invariably to fertilise itself.
8
Cupani himself had sent seed of the scrambling Lathyrusodoratus to Dr Robert Uvedale, a teacher who had developed a skill for growing unusual plants.
9
This explanation is, we think, almost certainly applicable to Lathyrusodoratus, though in Darwin's latest publication on the subject he gives reasons to the contrary.
10
Lathyrusodoratus (Second Generation).
11
Lathyrusodoratus (Leguminosae).-Fullyfertile.
12
Lathyrusodoratus-crossedand self-fertilisedplants of the 2nd generation, left uncovered in the greenhouse, but certainly self-fertilised ,producedpods in number: 91.