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Example sentences for "quite hardy"

  • This herbaceous plant is quite hardy, and will thrive in any good garden soil, producing its flowers in June and July.

  • A charming little herbaceous perennial which proves quite hardy in our climate, and well deserves a place in the rockery.

  • This ornamental deciduous shrub is quite hardy, but requires a light, sandy loam or peat soil and a shady situation.

  • This Lily is quite hardy, and needs no protection during winter.

  • The plant is quite hardy, though a native of southern Europe; it is also herbaceous and perennial, and it has been grown in this country for 330 years.

  • The plant, when a year old, has a half-shrubby appearance, and if I said that it was but half hardy I should probably be nearer the mark than if I pronounced it quite hardy.

  • All the Monardas are natives of North America, and, consequently, quite hardy in this country; they are also herbaceous and perennial.

  • This variety is early, quite hardy, very productive, and excellent, but does not keep so well as the yellow or white sorts.

  • A popular and extensively cultivated variety, quite hardy, productive, and of good quality.

  • It is an abundant bearer, quite hardy, and remarkably uniform in its quality.

  • It is quite hardy, and, in moderate winters, will remain in the open ground without injury, and serve for soups in spring.

  • It is quite hardy, and forms an effective ornament on the margins of shrubberies, near rockwork, etc.

  • This is quite hardy, and when planted in good ground, sends up strong shoots, clad with yellow flowers, to a height of 10 ft.

  • This plant, though a native of the East Indies, is quite hardy, and seems to do best in light soil with plenty of leaf-mould and having a warm aspect.

  • It is quite hardy in the open, but bears fruits more abundantly when planted against a wall.

  • The tree is quite hardy, but we have not heard of its bearing fruit in this country.

  • In the neighbourhood of London Garrya elliptica is quite hardy in ordinarily sheltered positions, but does not flower so freely as against a south wall.

  • It is quite hardy, but so brittle that it needs close and careful wall training or other support.

  • The Mimulus is quite hardy, and the most ordinary care will suffice for it.

  • As this variety is quite hardy, it may be planted in the select border with perfect safety, and, in common with other Day Lilies, it bears the shade of trees remarkably well.

  • This showy variety is quite hardy, and is largely grown in Scotland where it may frequently be seen on cottage walls.

  • It is quite hardy, and an interesting species that is well worthy of more extended culture.

  • This old and well-known plant is quite hardy in this country.

  • This is quite hardy in the more sheltered corners of the rock garden, with neat, shining foliage and pretty rosy flowers, produced so thickly all over the plant as almost to hide the foliage from view.

  • It is a good bearer, more so than the Joanneting, and is quite hardy, except in light soils, when it is liable to canker.

  • The tree is quite hardy, and an excellent bearer.

  • The tree is a free grower, quite hardy, and an excellent bearer; but requires a light and warm soil.

  • The tree is quite hardy, a slender grower, and never attains to a large size, but is a very excellent bearer.

  • The nearly allied Arum Lily (Calla æthiopica) is quite hardy as a water and water–side plant in the southern counties of England and Ireland.

  • A valuable quality of the plant is, that in any light soil it spreads freely, and it is quite hardy.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "quite hardy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    feeling rather; its character; just behind; land office; quite alone; quite another; quite ashamed; quite aware; quite close; quite cold; quite distinct; quite early; quite evident; quite independently; quite modern; quite obvious; quite plain; quite safe; quite similar; quite small; quite soft; quite straight; quite the; quite thick; quite willing; stir till