The Germander Speedwell (Veronica Chamaedrys) is one of our most beautiful and most abundant spring flowers.
The Wood Sage or Wood Germander (Teucrium Scorodonia) is very abundant on damp heaths, and is also commonly seen in hedgerows and on banks, especially in hilly and heathy districts.
The heavenly blue of the flower of the Germander Speedwell won for it the Welsh appellation of the Eye of Christ.
The kerchief itself was styled the Sudarium, and from some resemblance of the blossom of the Germander Speedwell to this saintly relic, bearing the features of Christ, the plant received the name of Veronica.
SIR, Sir Germander Pool, your noble friend and fellow in Armes, hath been at this house.
The nearest indication of the date of this letter is found in the mention of Sir Germander Pool.
The Germander Speedwell is a slender, wiry plant, whose stem sometimes creeps along the surface of the ground before it grows upward.
According to a Yorkshire superstition, if a child gathers the germander speedwell its mother will die during the year; and others consider it equally unlucky to bring the first snowdrop of the year into the house.
The germander speedwell has been esteemed highly efficacious, and the Emperor Charles V.
But perhaps he sees with eyes a bit dirty, like that learned botanist who pretends that the germander is of a DIRTY yellow.
But perhaps he may see with somewhat unclean eyes, like this learned botanist who asserts that the germander is of DIRTY yellow color.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "germander" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.