Mr Councillor Egan, on the way from the Law Courts, with his mulberryface and his mulberry velvet coat.
A mulberry leaf is a very insignificant thing, but a piece of satin is a highly marketable commodity, with money in it.
With time and patience," said Talleyrand, "the mulberry leaf is turned into satin.
Just then came an invitation to visit atMulberry Grove, where Mrs. Greene lived.
You might see the rows of mulberry trees as you came hither, all planted by Maitre Pierre's command, to feed the silk worms.
Now, it would be difficult for a man twenty years older than Quentin to say why this locality interested him more than either the pleasant garden or the grove of mulberry trees; for, alas!
Of Maitre Pierre, the great silk merchant, who planted all the mulberry trees in the park yonder," said Durward.
Agriculture and commerce are the chief resources of the colony, but I have seen no trace of the mulberry plantations attributed to it.
The mulberry is naturally a forest tree, but it is permitted to grow about the margins of fields, and is often planted in door yards for its fruit and its shade.
Nine varieties of the whitemulberry have been distinguished in cultivation.
The leaves are bitter, but are sometimes eaten as a salad; they serve as food for silkworms when mulberry leaves are not to be had.
When Columbine returned with the mulberrywine and a glass on a tray the conservatory was empty.
Columbine turned to pour out a glass of Mrs. Peck's mulberry wine.
Originally a garden ofmulberry trees, planted by James I.
The country was delightful and fertile, having good interval lands upon the streams; the forest was open, with abundance of walnut and mulberry trees.
One having dark hair and eyes and a sallow skin may find golden brown, a pale yellow or cream color becoming--possibly a mulberry if just the right depth.
A mulberry-tree, a scion of the famous mulberry that Shakespeare is known to have planted, is growing on the lawn.
His lawn, his orchard, and his garden are indicated; and a scion of his mulberry is growing on the spot where that famous tree once flourished.
The mulberry is extant and tenacious, and wears its honours in contented vigour.
Some are so red that they resemble blood, which is caused by their being grafted upon the mulberry stock.
We had camped for the night on the plains, at the forks of Mulberry and Canyon Paladuro; a point from whence could be seen one of the roughest and most picturesque scopes of country in the west.
The next morning Jack Ryan went with the wagon to pilot it across Mulberry Canyon, while "Van" and I branched off down into Canyon Paladuro to look for cattle signs.
From there we went toMulberry where we put in three or four days hunting.
It shall be, when you hear the sound of marching in the tops of the mulberry trees, that then you shall go out to battle; for God is gone out before you to strike the army of the Philistines.
David inquired again of God; and God said to him, You shall not go up after them: turn away from them, and come on them over against the mulberry trees.
In 1721 a patent was obtained for a manufactory of raw silk, and this park was taken for the purpose, and planted with mulberry trees.
Houses were built, and looms erected, on the above mulberry ground, but either the expense was too great, or the contributions did not arrive fast enough.
Silk is produced in large quantities and mulberrytrees are so common as to add greatly to the beauty of the country.
The mulberry plantations were greatly encouraged by Henry IV.
Through these apertures the new-hatched worms creep upwards instinctively, to get at the tendermulberry leaves strewed over the paper.
Prior to this time, some French noblemen, on their return from the conquest of Naples, had introduced a few silkworms with the mulberry into Dauphiny; but the business had not prospered in their hands.
If the heat of spring advances rapidly in April, it must not be suffered to act on the eggs, otherwise it might hatch the caterpillars long before the mulberry has sent forth its leaves to nourish them.
The mulberrytrees are still there, as you may see.
They had a fashion of eating mulberry leaves, and changing them into fine threads, called silk.
Many flowers and sweet scented herbs were also on either hand, and some poplars and a fine mulberry tree or two were a great addition to the general features of the landscape.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "mulberry" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.