Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
45599And what does it all matter, anyway?
45599Unusual punctuation and original spelling have been retained, receipe( recipe?)
21442''Is there no drainage from the pan necessary?'' 21442 Madam,"he said,"have you the_ Psoriasis septennis_?"
21442CHAPTER V. WATERING PLANTS.--IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS?
21442Dear reader, did you ever see a large Camellia plant in full blossom?
21442Do you recommend the use of artificial fertilizers for house plants, and does it benefit them?
21442How are we to attack this formidable network of vines in order to do anything with them?
21442IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS TO PLANTS?
21442If we call the rose the"Queen of Flowers,"what royal title shall we bestow upon the beautiful Japan Lilies?
21442Making and Planting Flower Beds 14 CHAPTER V. Watering Plants-- Is Cold Water Injurious?
21442Now which is right?
21442Who is not familiar with the Moneywort, with its low- trailing habit and small yellow flowers?
21442Who will say but what the exhalation from her numerous plants increasing the humidity of the atmosphere in which she lived, prolonged her life?
36279If the others could do all these things to perfection,she argued,"why could not he do them?"
36279Again I ask myself, What is this for?
36279Again he said,"What is this but bedding?
36279And the test question I put to myself at any show is this, Does this really help the best interests of horticulture?
36279And what is meant by coral- red?
36279And why eat doubtful_ Boletus_ when one can have the delicious Chantarelle(_ Cantharellus cibarius_), also now at its best?
36279Could anything be more tedious or more stupid?
36279For an immense hardy flower of beautiful colouring what can equal the salmon- rose Moutan Reine Elizabeth?
36279For have we not a brilliantly- gifted dignitary whose loving praise of the Queen of flowers has become a classic?
36279For instance, what has become of the"_ great gray Hulo_"which he describes as a plant of the largest and strongest habit?
36279For some time I did not see him, and when I asked another old countryman,"What''s gone o''Master Trussler?"
36279Friends often ask me vaguely about Pæonies, and when I say,"What kind of Pæonies?"
36279Has any tree so graceful a way of throwing up its stems as the birch?
36279He was pounced upon by another, who asked,"What is this but bedding?"
36279How is it that this fine native plant is almost invariably sold in nurseries as an American bramble?
36279I ask him, Does he think it pretty, or is it any use?
36279I ask myself, What is it for?
36279Is it not Ruskin who says of Velasquez, that there is more colour in his black than in many another painter''s whole palette?
36279Is not this some indication of what is wanted in gardens?
36279The pretty little Woodruff is in flower; what scent is so delicate as that of its leaves?
36279What does it teach?
36279What should we do in winter without its vigorous masses of grand foliage in garden and shrubbery, to say nothing of its use indoors?
36279Why amethystine?
36279Why is the orchard put out of the way, as it generally is, in some remote region beyond the kitchen garden and stables?
36279and what on earth are you going to do with that great heap of sand?
36279and would it really nod him a glad good- morning when he opened his window to greet it?
36279are you quarrying stone, or is it for the cellar of a building?