Each flower is composed of a green, scaly tube, and several rows of reflexed petals, which form a shallow cup 2½ in.
Flowers on the ends of the young, ripened branches, clustered in the upper leaf-axils, each flower 2 in.
In shape, each flower may be compared to a single Rose, the petals being flat and spreading, and the numerous stamens forming a compact cluster in the centre.
The flowers are arranged in fine clusters on a scape more than a foot high, each flower having a rather long, wiry, and gracefully bending pedicel; all of them spring from one centre.
Its flowers are produced in branched heads, dense and numerous, on stems a foot or more high; each flower is 1in.
The segments, and also the tube, are dotted with dark brown spots; each flower is tightly folded in a somewhat one-sided membranous calyx and borne erect.
Each flower is tiny, has five yellow petals, and numerous orange stamens, giving the spike a bright, golden-yellow appearance.
The magenta-pink petals and sepals are united to form a hood; the lip, curving abruptly downward, is broadly ovate and white; each flower has a short spur and is bracted.
Each flower-head has a centre of short, tubular, yellowish florets that turn brown or grayish as they grow old; they are surrounded by from four to six round, white rays.
Each flower is composed of but 8 to 12 narrow, orange-yellow rays, surrounding a central cluster of tubular florets of brownish orange.
Inner scales (bractlets) 2 to each flower, thin, one between the scale of the spikelet and the flower, one between the latter and the axis of the spikelet.
Fruit a berry-like double drupe, crowned with the calyx-teeth of the two flowers, with 4 small seed-like bony nutlets to each flower.
Each flower sits in a green cup, which is made up of five sepals joined together.
Each flower grows at the end of a short stalk, but two or three of these stalks often spring from the main stem at the same place.
Each flower has a stalk of its own, and each stalk rises from between a leaf and the stem.
Each flower has a yellow calyx tube, which is divided at the mouth into four parts.
All herbaceous plants with five stamens in each flower, or with seven or more stamens and one ovary in each flower, may be sought under Dicotyledones.
If this were not so, it is a simple mathematical problem that, with three different sets of style lengths and six sets of stamens, two in each flower, eighteen different crosses might be possible.
In the peony, for instance, over three million pollen grains are produced in each flower, only a minute fraction of which can ever fertilize an ovule.
About April the hanging catkins of the Birch, which were in evidence in the previous autumn, have matured and become dark crimson; the scales separate and expose the two stamens of each flower, which has a single sepal.
Each cell contains two seed-eggs, but as a rule only one in each flower develops.
The stamens are normally five in each flower, but they vary up to twelve.
The yellow flowers are arranged in terminal racemes, each flower having a lanceolate bract at the base of its short stalk, and very small bracts at the base of the calyx.
Each flower has a little, bell-shaped, persistent perianth; a superior ovary with two styles; and four or five stamens with black anthers.
The ovary has three cells, and contains six ovules; but, as a rule, only one ovule of each flower is fertilised.
Illustration: As she placed them on the heads of the old people, each flower became a golden crown.
And then she took two flowers out of her wreath and kissed them, and they shone first like silver and then like gold, and as she placed them on the heads of the old people, each flower became a golden crown.
All the branches were loaded with flowers, each flower as beautiful and as fragrant as a rose, and had any one tasted them he would have found them sweeter even than jam.
ONE MALE, Monandria; includes the plants which possess but One Stamen in each flower.
The Classes are distinguished from each other in this ingenious system, by the number, situation, adhesion, or reciprocal proportion of the males in each flower.
Catkins cylindric, with leafy bracts at base, and apparently 1 stamen toeach flower (the filaments are united).
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "each flower" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.