The fuchsia is, properly, an out-door bloomer, but with care can be brought to flower in winter.
A nasturtium, in the same window, flowers abundantly, and a fuchsia beside it is a paragon among plants.
The children watched it from the schoolroom window splashing up on the path, and beating down the fuchsia bushes in the border.
They passed through the village, a long road of whitewashed cottages, with here and there a fuchsia bush by a door, a line of bright nasturtiums under a window, or a potato patch dotted with curly kale by the side of a house.
After the gloom of the loney the low, white garden wall, the fuchsia bushes, the beds of yellow marigolds seemed to smile at them in a glow of sunlight.
A cluster of late roses in Patsy's garden glowed against the fuchsia hedge; a white flower stood out in almost startling distinctness.
Upon one plant of Fuchsia speciosa, started from a cutting of a single eye in March, we counted at one time, in the December following, one hundred and fifty perfect blossoms.
Beyond Letterfrank, the road dips into the lovely Pass of Kylemore; and again, as back at Glengarriff, it was bordered with fuchsia hedges, gay with scarlet flowers.
The fuchsia also grows to a large size; but it is a more delicate plant than the veronica, and thrives only in sheltered places.
If the gorse should fail the fuchsia might even take its place on the mountains.
I do not know quite when the Fuchsia was introduced into this country, but I believe it was about the middle of the eighteenth century.
A Fuchsia bush rarely looks shabby on account of dead and dying flowers, for, when their work is done, the petals usually fall before they have begun to wither.
Yet in 1788 there was but one fuchsia in England, and that was in Kew Gardens.
For the fuchsia is an alien, brought into Europe in 1703, from the Pacific coast of South America, and named after an old-time German botanist of the sixteenth century; one Leonard Fuchs.
Thenceforward the spread of the fuchsia was rapid.
Native Trees': "A species of native fuchsia that is coming greatly into favour is called [Fuchsia] Procumbens.
Close to the road were giantfuchsia trees, with either yellow leaves or bare branches, for the fuchsia is one of the few trees that sheds its leaves in winter.
For plants in pots the competition was slight, and a fuchsia and two small heliotropes all won prizes.
The fuchsia plant is commonly used for hedges, which all summer long is loaded with blossoms of purple and red.
The castle is in the center of the pass, between two lofty mountains, and the roadway for miles passes through a forest and between fields that are inclosed with fuchsia hedges.
Though the genus Fuchsia is an extensive one, most of them are of more value in the greenhouse than outdoors--that is to say, throughout the greater part of the country.
An evergreen shrub, bearing in corymbs at the end of the branches pale-red trumpet-flowers something after the style of Fuchsia corymbiflora.
It was about a week after the elephants had been transported across the river, and Sophy and Fuchsia were sitting in the latter's bedroom at the "Barn.
A cynical critic might have compared Miss Fuchsia herself to a "talking doll.
Now the question that puzzledFuchsia was, what was the nature of the dose?
Fuchsia was fastidious, an aristocrat to her finger-tips, and it was no drawback to Pat FitzGerald that his maternal uncle was an earl.
Little did Fuchsia suppose, as she chattered unguardedly and gave away a confidence, that, in doing so, she had signed what was neither more nor less than a sentence of death.
All right then, I will," andFuchsia sat bolt upright.
Down at the bottom of a good-sized heart Miss Fuchsia was aware that it was not altogether an admiration for the East which detained her lingering in Burma.
Fuchsia Bliss was an orphan, absolutely independent in every sense of the word, who looked considerably younger than her real age, and appeared so small and so fragile that, like thistledown, she might almost be blown away.
Fuchsia with emphasis, "I have watched him carefully, and I don't believe he has the faintest suspicion, any more than you had yourself.
Fuchsia dismissed the idea with a gesture of her tiny hand.
This was the conclusion at which Fuchsia the shrewd arrived, after she had paid a good many visits to "Heidelberg.
Thwaites,[908] has recorded a remarkable case of a seed from Fuchsia coccinea fertilised by F.
A Fuchsia has been seen[867] bearing two kinds of flowers.
You plucked, perhaps, a piece of fuchsia when you plighted troth," murmured my Lady.
Before the cottage was a porch with honeysuckles trained upon it, and one full-flowering fuchsia upon either side.
At the Tandridge dispersion sale he gave over a thousand pounds for the Lockinge Forest King mare, Fuchsia of Tandridge, and her foal.
The girl rose suddenly and turned to a fuchsia tree, pretending to pick some of its flowers.
But the chief beauty of the small garden was a magnificent tree-fuchsia which grew in front of one of the windows, and was covered with deep rose-red flowers set amid its small and deep-green leaves.
During his career as an exhibitor of fuchsias Mr. Lye has taken nearly one hundred first prizes--a measure of success which fully justifies the bestowal of the title of being the Champion Fuchsia Grower of his day.
Beyond thefuchsia bushes a sighing rose, where a continuous foamless wave felt the silences of the shore.
Once more, beyond the fuchsia bushes, the sea sighed, as it felt the long shore with a continuous foamless wave.
It favoured its own plants, too--the tamarisk on the hedge, the fuchsia and myrtle in the cottage garden.
As the spring-cart nid-nodded down the hill towards Troy, the grey roofs of the town broke upon Hester's sight beyond a cloud of fuchsia blossoms in a garden at the angle of the road.
There also had been a bow of fuchsia velvet ribbon on the lace and straw hat she had swung so charmingly less than five hours ago.
Fuchsia and rose-bushes languished in a tipsy wire enclosure near the front door.
Of course, the tulip and the hyacinth were to grow from little bulbs, while the fuchsia was a small plant which she had bought at the greenhouse.
And in the center of her window, she was to have a cosmos flower, with a fuchsia and a hyacinth and a tulip at the sides, and one of her precious pinks brought in from the summer garden.
The fuchsia and tradescantia contained bundles of raphides of the same form and equally as fine as those of the acrid plants.
For this purpose some recent twigs and leaves of the fuchsiawere subjected to pressure in a tincture press.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fuchsia" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.