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Example sentences for "blueberries"

Lexicographically close words:
bludgeons; bludy; blue; blueback; bluebells; blueberry; bluebird; bluebirds; bluebottle; bluecoat
  1. And about all those dod-fired Diggers down there know or care about property interests is that a burn makes blueberries grow, and blueberries are worth six cents a quart!

  2. I don't want to bring up old stories, but you know and I know that the prospects of six cents a quart for blueberries makes you forgetful about what's been said to you.

  3. A baking-powder-biscuit dough baked with blueberries makes a very appetizing dessert.

  4. A delicious pudding can be made by combining blueberries with slices of bread.

  5. Pour the rest of the blueberries and juice over the bread.

  6. Pour one-half of the blueberries and the juice over the bread, and put the four remaining slices of bread on top of the berries.

  7. Huckleberries, although belonging to a different class, are commonly regarded as blueberries by many persons.

  8. Add a cupful of blueberries and bake quickly.

  9. It is the earliest of the blueberries to ripen and grows in the thin, sandy, and rocky soil which is spurned by most other plants.

  10. The flavor of all blueberries has a nutty quality which seems to give the berry more substance as a food.

  11. We had known Cape Cod in summer, with its blueberries and its sailing-craft, its wharves and artist-colonies and ocean breezes.

  12. There are by far too many blueberries in the first zone.

  13. She gave us blueberries with cream of cream.

  14. And then there were no mosquitoes, no alligators, no serpents uncomfortably hugging the trees, no miasmas lurking near; and blueberries always.

  15. With this supper we had some of the blueberries stewed, and Hubbard said they would have been the "real thing if we only had a little sugar for them.

  16. Towards noon the storm began to moderate, and in a short stroll about the island we found some blueberries and currants, which we fell upon and devoured.

  17. Blueberries grew in abundance on the side of the mountain, which, together with the country near it, had been burned.

  18. On the 5th, while crossing the barrens we came upon some blueberries and after eating our fill we were able to gather enough to supply each man with a big dish of them for supper.

  19. Raisins cut in quarters may be substituted for currants, with any desired flavor, and nuts and raisins may be used for Fruit and Nut Buns, and dried blueberries for Blueberry Buns.

  20. Nice ripe blueberries or black raspberries may be served with cereals.

  21. A3/4-1 cup water Put blueberries with sugar in bottom of preserving kettle, pour water over, cover with crust, let rise and cook the same as steamed apple dumpling.

  22. Fruit and Nut Gems= Add a few English currants, seeded raisins in quarters, with or without fine cut dates, or dried or fresh blueberries to any gem batter.

  23. Bread and Milk with Sweet Fruits= Add nice ripe blueberries to bread and milk for supper, also ripe black raspberries or baked sweet apples.

  24. Scalloped Raspberries, Blueberries or Peaches= Put fruit and crumbs or very thin slices of bread in layers in pudding dish, sprinkle each layer with sugar and have crumbs on top.

  25. I do not think ANY minister's son would eat blueberries that grew on the graves of dead people.

  26. I don't know what was wrong with him, but I think it very likely he had been eating those blueberries that grew in the graveyard.

  27. Blueberries yield a goodly part of their cash income, for the berries usually sell for about twenty cents a quart, and it is easy for an Indian family to pick eighty quarts in a day.

  28. The Flambeau Ojibwe use the leaves to line their buckets when they pick blueberries and also cover them with the leaves, to keep them from spoiling.

  29. Maize will be drying on cloth screens, and blueberries will be drying to tough, inky pellets.

  30. The Flambeau and the Pillager Ojibwe harvest quantities of blueberries both for themselves and to sell.

  31. Some of the wild crops they gather possess considerable commercial value, such as blueberries and wild rice.

  32. Blueberries were often cooked with this mush to give it a good flavor and it was seasoned with maple sugar.

  33. The wild strawberry in July, and the blueberries and raspberries in August, and the small cranberry in September, give occupation to the children, whose prices for berries are variable.

  34. And Dusty Star fortunately remembered the spot on the barren where the blueberries were on the point of being very nearly ripe.

  35. Blackberries, blueberries or huckleberries, and red and black raspberries may be used for pie in the same way by merely varying the amount of sugar with the sourness of the berries.

  36. For instance, blackberries will probably require a little more sugar than raspberries, while blueberries will require the least.

  37. There were succotash and baked codfish, a good brown loaf, and pies made of blueberries gathered and dried the summer before.

  38. I was hoeing beyond that clump of bushes," said Daniel, pointing to a group of high blueberries that had been allowed to remain in the cleared field.

  39. I shall never forget the first time I saw blueberries served on the table.

  40. I had never seen blueberries before, and yet, at the sight of them, there leaped up in my mind memories of dreams wherein I had wandered through swampy land eating my fill of them.

  41. So Farmer Brown's boy made his lunch on blueberries and then rather sheepishly he started for home to tell of all the strange things that had happened to him in the Old Pasture.

  42. Why, right in the middle of the biggest patch of the biggest blueberries he ever had seen in all his life!

  43. He knew well enough that some one must have picked them--for whoever heard of blueberries growing in tin pails?

  44. Poor Hawthorne was indeed thousands of miles away from Oxford and Cambridge; that touch about the blueberries and the logs on the Androscoggin tells the whole story, and strikes the note, as it were, of his circumstances.

  45. In this corner, one morning, I saw a catbird gathering blueberries for dinner.

  46. Blueberries and cranberries grow far up the sides.

  47. A bed of blueberries also presented itself, and we stopped to dine upon them.

  48. Black raspberries and grapes require less sugar, while blueberries and blackberries require none at all, or not more than a tablespoonful to the quart.

  49. Blueberries and whortleberries frequently need to be washed.

  50. Finely-cut, mellow sweet apples, sliced bananas, and blueberries may be used in a similar way.

  51. Make a jam by mashing well some fresh raspberries or blueberries and sweetening to taste.

  52. The following fall they are loaded so heavily with blueberries that the harvest is gathered with rakes, each of which has a cup underneath it into which the berries fall as the rake is thrust through the bushes.

  53. Sometimes the course ran for miles through evergreen forests, where the fragrance of the fir-trees filled the air; and again we came out into the open regions where thousands of acres of wild blueberries were spread around us.


  54. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "blueberries" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.