The habit of the plant is much branched, the spreading clusters of flowers being six or ten times the size of the plant, so that it becomes top-heavy; it blooms for many weeks, and is not damaged by coarse weather.
The habit of the plant is much branched, but only slightly at base; it becomes top-heavy from the numerous shoots near the top, which cause it to be procumbent; otherwise this subject would rank with tall growers.
The habit of the shrub is much branched, of strong growth, and very floriferous.
The habit of the shrub is rampant, climbing, much branched, and very floriferous.
A straggling, much branched, and woody shrub, from six to eighteen inches high, found chiefly on the mountainous heaths of the North.
Its stem is much branched, generally clothed with soft hairs; and its leaves are stalked, ovate, serrate, the upper ones passing into bracts which are shorter than the flowers.
It is a wiry little shrub, from a foot to eighteen inches high, much branched at the base.
The variety is one of the most productive of the field-beets; but the roots are neither smooth nor symmetrical, a majority being forked or much branched.
Pilei soft-corinaceous, much branched; the branches flattened, furrowed and somewhat dilated at the apex.
The plant is rather fragile, white and yellow, two to five inches high, the mass of branches from two to five inches wide, the trunk thick, much branched.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "much branched" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.