Gentianella) would grow as freely in moist places on any of our own mountains as it does on its native hills; as, indeed, it would in all moist loams, where it could not be choked by coarse and taller subjects.
Fern, and with luxuriant masses of drooping leaves, and on that account is transferred to moist places in gardens, and cultivated by some, though generally these large specimens are difficult to remove and soon perish.
It always haunts meadows and hides among the tufts of tall grasses growing in moist places.
The brightly colored butterflies, which are sometimes found congregating in immense numbers in moist places, are familiar objects, and swarm upon the clover-fields and by the roadside in the summer months throughout the United States.
It grows best in moist places, which may probably have given rise to its name.
It is a common herb throughout the nation, and rejoices in barren, sandy, moist places.
They grow in moist places, and near to brooksides.
This grows as well in upland grounds, as in moist places, woods, and shadowy places by the sea-side in many places of this land, and is usually nursed up in gardens.
This very elegant little plant so exactly represents the Sceptrum Carolinum, plentiful here in moist places, one might take it for a representation of that in miniature.
The gravel and sand were commonly about a span deep in moist places; in dry ones much more.
The bright golden blossoms of the silver-weed are common in moist places, haunting stream-banks, lingering about stagnant ponds, or even pushing their way up amid the grasses of our salt marshes.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "moist places" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.