This is a fine border hardy perennial, producing long racemes of rosy-purple flowers in June or July.
An American climbing plant which produces in the autumn bunches ofpurple flowers of an agreeable odour.
This bulb produces early in spring, and preceding the foliage, a mass of rose-purple flowers close to the ground.
The pinkish-purple flowers form a broad head, over an inch across, with an involucre.
Its leaves are narrow and one-ribbed, and the bluish-purple flowers arranged in short dense spikes, the flower stalk being branched only above the middle.
Two species of Stock (Matthiola) are to be found on the coast, both being characterised by purple flowers.
A genus of American herbs, having showy red, white, or purple flowers.
The Burdock (Arctium lappa) grows very commonly in our waste places, with wavy leaves, and round heads of purple flowers, and hooked scales.
This herb (Ajuga reptans) is of the labiate order, bearing dark blue or purple flowers, whorled, and crowded into a spike.
This herb is of the Borage tribe, and is conspicuous by its height of from one to two feet, its large rough leaves, which provoke itching when handled, and its drooping white or purple flowers growing on short stalks.
Only one or two light blue-purple flowers grow in the axils of the leaves of our common vetch.
Defn: A perennial herb (Epilobium spicatum) with narrow willowlike leaves and showy rose-purple flowers.
Defn: A genus of American herbs, having showy red, white, or purple flowers.
Defn: A low plant with fleshy leaves (Sedum telephium), having clusters of purple flowers.
There are also several forms of this species with white, rose, or purple flowers, all having a yellow centre with distinct blotches at the base of the petals.
Dalhansoni, a pretty hybrid between dalmaticum and Hansoni, about 5 feet high, with dark brownish-purple flowers in June and July.
A pretty little South African plant with narrow leaves and slender spikes of violet-purple flowers, as shown in Plate 32, fig.
Its long, coarse, hispid stems run riot over small undershrubs or dead or unsightly brushwood, often completely covering them with a mound of foliage thickly sown with the dull-purple flowers.
Its flower-stem is from eight to twelve inches high, bearing a cluster of bright rose-purple flowers.
It has long, flexuous stems, and large clusters of purple flowers, which are made all the more conspicuous by the showy yellow anthers.
This, which has lilac-purple flowers, produced in early spring, is not a very desirable species, being rather straggling of growth and with few flowers.
This is a distinct species, with curled leaves, and large reddish-purple flowers.
A good hardy species with broadly campanulate rosy-purple flowers, spotted with yellow.
A handsome species with silvery leaves and dense clusters of purple flowers.
A handsome species with serrate leaves and blue-purple flowers.
This species has entire mostly basal leaves, and bears a single head of orange or purple flowers.
A peculiar plant with leafy stems, two to four feet high, bearing a dense cluster of elongate rayless heads of purple flowers.
The pink to rose-purple flowers of the Horse Mint form roundish heads at the tips of stiff stems 3-4 ft.
The blue-purple flowers of the Blue Beard-tongue are large and grow in conspicuous one-sided spikes on stems 2-5 ft.
The small yellowish to blue-purple and rose-purple flowers of the Clustered Pentstemon grow, as the name indicates, in crowded groups and bloom in early summer.
The tiny blue, pink or purple flowers of the Pennyroyal occur in open spikes on stems 4-8 in.
Revolutum, Johnsoni, and Hendersoni have all exquisite rose or purple flowers.
Ovata has handsome large leaves and purple flowers, and the variety aurea-variegata is particularly fine.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "purple flowers" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.