African plants, withpanicles of small white flowers, and simple leaves.
The Osage Orange (Maclura aurantiaca), has the male and female flowers on different plants, the male being borne in short close panicles of ten or twelve flowers each, and not differing in construction from those of the other genera.
The other species have generally the same kind of terminal, uprightpanicles of feathery flowers, but they are very inferior in beauty.
Brown, contains principally hothouse plants with erect spicate racemes or panicles of small flowers.
The leaves of these trees are alternate and pinnate, with unequal-sided leaflets; and the flowers are in large spreading panicles composed of numerous little cymes.
The flowers are arranged in panicles on scapes nearly a foot high, the panicles being 6in.
These, when topped with panicles of flowers, though they be green ones, are worthy objects for any garden.
The long and elegant panicles of bracteƦ, together with the pleasing arrangement thereof, are the main features of this subject.
A well-flowered specimen is very effective on rockwork, but the panicles have a fault of heading over, from their weight, and also because, unlike S.
Its value as a garden subject consists in its dark evergreen foliage, good habit, and handsome panicles of bloom.
For many weeks the flowers continue to be developed, and from the deciduous quality of the fading parts, the panicles have a neat appearance to the last.
The flowers differ but slightly from those of other encrusted forms of the genus, but they are a creamy white, arranged in small panicles on short and slender stems.
They are produced on tall leafy stems in panicles of different forms, as pyramidal, rounded, or flattish; the clusters of bloom are sometimes 8in.
The panicles are leafy, having small entire leaves, and others once and twice-cut.
Its lofty and diffuse panicles are ornamental and lasting; it is a subject which may be grown in almost any part of the garden, and hardly seem misplaced, notwithstanding its height of 3ft.
Flowers in terminal pedunculate or nearly sessile panicles appearing in Florida from August to December.
Capsule ovoid-pyramidal; flowers in terminal panicles of secund racemes; anther-cells opening longitudinally from the apex to the middle; leaves deciduous.
These panicles are very variable in form and size, being either loose or dense, and varying from one to three inches in diameter.
The little white flowers, which bloom during July and August, are arranged in panicles with spreading branches, the lower of which are either horizontal or bent downward.
Of all the dwarf perennial grasses it is perhaps the best for isolation on the grass, where its fine dense and graceful tufts of long hair-like leaves and elegant panicles form a quite distinct-looking and ornamental object.
Its delicate panicles give an additional charm to the finest bouquets.
Flowers very large, deep orange, in panicles which stand up considerably above the foliage.
Near the village of Lernai oak woods are passed, in which Vanda coerulea grows in profusion, waving itspanicles of azure flowers in the wind.
A very large De Lesseps Begonia is loaded with immense clusters of white waxy flowers; a Woodstock Begonia is brilliant with large panicles of red blossoms, also Otto Hacker and Wetsteinii well filled with buds.
Its foliage, of dark, rich, glossy green, furnishes a most pleasing background against which its countless panicles of white bloom stand out with most striking and delightful effect.
Late in the season, after most other plants are in "the sere and yellow leaf" it is literally covered with greatpanicles of starry white flowers which have a delightful fragrance.
The sea-side variety differs from this in having the stem leafless at the base, and the panicles leafless and broad.
The flowers, which are disposed either in spikes (sessile flowers arranged along a common axis) or in panicles (flowers stalked and arranged as in fig.
The panicles are upright and unbranched, and the species may be readily known by the flowers, which are compressed, with long awns, and with the lower glumes wanting.
In these the florets are inpanicles and are not awned.
Brome grasses generally are known by their loose panicles of flowers, lanceolate and compressed spikelets, and awned florets enclosed in unequal glumes; and B.
The Sea Meadow Grass (Poa maritima) grows in salt marshes near the sea, its erect rigid paniclesreaching a height of about eight or ten inches.
The normal form of the Lesser Meadow Rue, which grows freely in some chalky pastures and thickets, has leaves three or four times pinnate, and lax panicles of drooping flowers without any petals.
Panicles more compact, flowers inclining to one side, grains more tumid than 2nd, quite devoid of hairs, awn straight.
The best way is to cultivate both types in alternate rows and to cut off the staminate panicles a few days before they open their first flowers.
In the year 1862 Shirreff devoted himself to the selection of oats, searching for the best panicles from the whole country, and comparing their offspring in his experimental garden.
A hardy deciduous flowering tree, bearing erect panicles of large, lilac, gloxinia-like flowers.
An evergreen shrub, bearing branching panicles of pale-lilac flowers, doing best with the support and protection of a wall.
It bears panicles of orange-red flowers, and when in full bloom has a brilliant effect.
It bears panicles of white, bell-shaped flowers in the summer, at which time it is quite a feature at Tresco.
An evergreen tree, bearing paniclesof white flowers followed by plum-like fruit.
Rhus Cotinus) in which the flowers are mostly abortive and the panicles transformed into tangles of plumose pedicels looking like wreaths of smoke.
The humblest grass in our meadows belongs to the same natural order as the tall bamboo, that, shooting up its panicles amid the jungles of India to the height of sixty feet, looks down upon all the second class trees of the country.
The long-awned species of Festuca have compact stiff paniclesand narrow or setaceous leaves (see p.
Slender grasses, not reed-like, with delicate loosely spreading panicles of small spikelets.
Titoki, a beautiful tree with large panicles of reddish flowers .
The most influential of the grasses composing the sod is a delicate calamagrostis with fine filiform leaves, and loose, airypanicles that seem to float above the flowery lawn like a purple mist.
In still nights the grass panicles and every leaf and stalk are laden with frost crystals, through which the morning sunbeams sift in ravishing splendor, transforming each to a precious diamond radiating the colors of the rainbow.
The floating grass panicles are scarcely felt in brushing through their midst, so flue are they, and none of the flowers have tall or rigid stalks.
On a Casuarina near the swamp, I saw a beautiful Loranthus with rather small oval leaves, panicles of flowers, with the tube of the corolla green; segments of the limbs dark red; of a dwarf bushy habit.
A climbing vine with flowers in panicles (white or pinkish flowers in summer) =Climbing Fumitory, Adlumia fungosa.
Spikelets arranged in panicles or in panicled spikes --8.
The spikelets are grouped in racemes, spikes, orpanicles of various size.
Flowers in large panicles or corymbs, each flower 5-10 mm.
Panicles short, not as long as the subtending leaves =Goosefoot, Chenopodium murale.
Flowers in paniclesor other branched clusters --141.
Appearing before the leaves in loose panicles from lateral or terminal buds of the preceding season, sterile and fertile flowers on different trees; bracted; calyx none; petals none.
The flowers appear in clusters or panicles in May or June.
The flowers appear after the leaves unfold; are cream-colored; in terminal panicles 5 to 7 inches long and 2 to 3 inches broad, quite downy.
The conspicuous deep red panicles of fruit remain unchanged on the tree during the winter.
The following year he planted an acre; and the tall broom-corn with its spreading panicles attracted much attention.
Pleasanter objects to the eye were the scarlet panicles of the Fouquiera splendens, then undescribed by botanists, and yet to become a favourite of the arboretums.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "panicles" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.