Spikelets unisexual or perfect, in loose panicles, with only 2 glumes (in our genera) and palet none.
Height, 2 to 3 feet; third week of June; flowers, pure white, borne profusely in loose panicles.
They have large orange coloured, tubular, inflated, ringent flowers, in loose panicles.
The whole plant is aromatic, and closely allied to Myrtus; the flowers are in loose panicles, the leaves oblong, accuminate, entire.
In long-peduncled, loose panicles; white; four lines across; parts in fives.
White; two lines long; in globular umbels, arranged in loose panicles a foot or two long.
White or pale lavender, in loose panicles a foot or two long.
Twenty-five to fifty, in loose panicles; small; with six to nine sepal-like bracts.
The flowers are produced in great profusion in loose panicles, and they are very ornamental, the samaras and leaves closely resembling those of the common ash.
The male flowers are produced in loose panicles; the calyx (fig.
Oats are not produced in spikes, but in loose panicles; and the male and female flowers of the Maize or Indian Corn are on different plants.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loose panicles" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.