Lobes of the leaf obtuse or rounded =Hepatica, Hepatica triloba.
Once he found a hepatica bud the last day of February .
Possibly the Annals of Surgery is afraid that, should it reject the Sal Hepatica advertisement, for instance, it might he haled into court!
If only a small percentage of the physicians who receive these samples distribute them, the increase in Sal Hepaticaconsumers may be imagined.
Sal Hepatica is a saline combination containing the alterative and laxative properties similar to the natural ‘Bitter Waters’ of Europe with the addition of sodium phosphate.
In rheumatism and gout Sal Hepaticafurnishes the physician with an ideal eliminant, usually affording prompt relief.
In its conflict with Rule 4 Sal Hepatica belongs to that class of nostrums which have been so successfully exploited by manufacturers through the unwitting efforts of thoughtless and careless physicians.
The report of the referee follows: Sal Hepatica is a saline laxative sold by the Bristol-Myers Company of New York.
Sal Hepatica is one of the best-selling laxatives in department stores and drug stores to-day.
In the same circular, its promiscuous use is invited in these terms: “Owing to its palatability, Sal Hepatica is particularly well adapted to the requirements of childhood or the feeble and delicate.
The spring beauty hardly allows the hepatica to get ahead of her.
In the spring a hepaticaplant wastes no time on getting a new suit of leaves.
You'll find thehepatica blossoms all ready to poke up their heads.
He has acquired gradually a regular round of customers, for whom he gathers a successive harvest of wild flowers from Pussy Willows and Hepaticato winter berries.
Bryant, calling the Hepatica Squirrelcups (a name I never heard given them elsewhere), says they form "a graceful company hiding in their bells a soft aerial blue.
Some of the Sal Hepatica advertising has claimed that it “is a saline combination with the addition of Sodium Phosphate and Lithia Citrate!
Since neither the names nor the amounts of the “harmless salts” are mentioned, the composition of Sal Hepatica is secret.
The same advertisement as it appeared in those days in The Journal shows that claim toned down to, “Sal Hepatica is a powerful solvent of Uric Acid.
In the old-time medical journal advertisements, one reads, “Sal Hepatica is the most powerful solvent of Uric Acid known.
The report that follows was submitted by the chemists: “Sal Hepaticais a white, granular, odorless powder.
In those easy going days, the Bristol-Myers Company declared that “diabetes is treated with decided advantage by means of Sal Hepatica .
Sal Hepatica no longer “contains all the tonic, alterative and laxative salts .
Oh, but someone says, the hepatica is the first flower of spring; all the nature writers say so.
At this place the hepatica did not bloom until March 26.
In the case of the hepatica acutiloba, however, it has been found that staminate flowers grow on one plant and pistillate flowers on another, hence insects are essential to the perpetuation of this species.
I have no hesitation in saying that, throughout the Middle and New England States, the hepatica is the first spring flower.
The Germans call it Mai blume, a name they also apply to theHepatica and Kingcup.
In Germany the Kingcup, Lily of the Valley, andHepatica are severally called Mai-blume.
Closely following on the heels of our handsome Hepatica we find the delicate flowered Bloodroot unfurling its leaves and expanding its flowers in rich, rocky, open woodland.
If we except the Skunk Cabbage, the beautiful Hepatica is the first of our flowers to appear.
Hepatica is a Latin word, and signifies pertaining to the liver.
It has the same sort of stem that the hepatica has.
The ginger has such a wee flower hiding under the leaves that it doesn't count, but the hepatica has a beautiful little blue or purple flower at the top of a hairy scape.
Their leaves seem much too juicy to be evergreen, but the hepatica does stay green all winter.
Bloodroot and hepatica are like the dewdrops of early morning which disappear before the sun.
We look for bloodroot and hepatica to follow arbutus, and yet I have on occasion found bluets several weeks in advance of these.
The Fistulina hepatica is well known in Europe, and is found in different parts of the United States, in some places growing abundantly.
Professor Halsted has noted that this species bears staminate flowers on one plant and pistillate flowers on another; whereas the Hepatica Hepatica usually bears flowers of both sexes above the same root.
The SHARP-LOBED LIVER-LEAF (Hepatica acuta) differs chiefly from the preceding in having the ends of the lobes of its leaves and the tips of the three leaflets that form its involucre quite sharply pointed.
We never gather summer flowers one by one, as we gather the arbutus and hepatica of spring.
There is no particular flower that means June to me as the hepatica means March, the arbutus April, the shad-bush May, and the red wood-lily July.
At the first words of this explanation, Kitty had laid her parasol upon the writing-table and stuck her little bouquet of willow buds and hepatica into a pretty little milk-white vase that stood beside the inkstand.
The hepatica or liverwort, the varieties of which look so pretty in our gardens in spring, was formerly considered to be a species of Anemone, and indeed the genus Hepatica appears to rest on very slight grounds.
The hepatica agrees in all points with the Anemone, except in the involucre, which is so very like a green calyx, from the manner in which it enfolds the flower in the bud, as scarcely to be distinguished.
It has, however, been adopted by most modern botanists, and the Anemone Hepatica of Linnaeus is now generally called Hepatica triloba.
Lucia was serene and beaming with quiet happiness, like a blue hepatica blossom, a little bashful, but responding archly and merrily, and her fine clear eyes dimmed by only the slightest suspicion of a tear.
Hepatica scrutinized the Skeptic's linen critically before she put it in.
We had not more than taken our seats when the Skeptic leaned past Hepatica to call my attention to two people who had come down the aisle and were finding their places just across it and in the row ahead of us.
Hepatica asked anxiously if she really had looked so very old-fashioned in the white evening frock which had been three times made over.
Hepatica looked regretful, but she did not urge me to remain.
Hepatica and I packed with care, selecting the most expensive things we owned.
A bargain sale of groceries, more likely," said Hepatica herself.
I passed Mrs. Hepatica the other day when she didn't see me," said the Philosopher to me.
I saw those of Hepatica and the Skeptic and the Philosopher drop, although they made haste to prop their countenances up again.
As Hepatica read it aloud we stared at one another, astonished.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hepatica" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.