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 |
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45599 | And what does it all matter, anyway? |
45599 | Unusual 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_?" |
21442 | CHAPTER V. WATERING PLANTS.--IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS? |
21442 | Dear reader, did you ever see a large Camellia plant in full blossom? |
21442 | Do you recommend the use of artificial fertilizers for house plants, and does it benefit them? |
21442 | How are we to attack this formidable network of vines in order to do anything with them? |
21442 | IS COLD WATER INJURIOUS TO PLANTS? |
21442 | If we call the rose the"Queen of Flowers,"what royal title shall we bestow upon the beautiful Japan Lilies? |
21442 | Making and Planting Flower Beds 14 CHAPTER V. Watering Plants-- Is Cold Water Injurious? |
21442 | Now which is right? |
21442 | Who is not familiar with the Moneywort, with its low- trailing habit and small yellow flowers? |
21442 | Who will say but what the exhalation from her numerous plants increasing the humidity of the atmosphere in which she lived, prolonged her life? |
36279 | If the others could do all these things to perfection,she argued,"why could not he do them?" |
36279 | Again I ask myself, What is this for? |
36279 | Again he said,"What is this but bedding? |
36279 | And the test question I put to myself at any show is this, Does this really help the best interests of horticulture? |
36279 | And what is meant by coral- red? |
36279 | And why eat doubtful_ Boletus_ when one can have the delicious Chantarelle(_ Cantharellus cibarius_), also now at its best? |
36279 | Could anything be more tedious or more stupid? |
36279 | For an immense hardy flower of beautiful colouring what can equal the salmon- rose Moutan Reine Elizabeth? |
36279 | For have we not a brilliantly- gifted dignitary whose loving praise of the Queen of flowers has become a classic? |
36279 | For instance, what has become of the"_ great gray Hulo_"which he describes as a plant of the largest and strongest habit? |
36279 | For some time I did not see him, and when I asked another old countryman,"What''s gone o''Master Trussler?" |
36279 | Friends often ask me vaguely about Pæonies, and when I say,"What kind of Pæonies?" |
36279 | Has any tree so graceful a way of throwing up its stems as the birch? |
36279 | He was pounced upon by another, who asked,"What is this but bedding?" |
36279 | How is it that this fine native plant is almost invariably sold in nurseries as an American bramble? |
36279 | I ask him, Does he think it pretty, or is it any use? |
36279 | I ask myself, What is it for? |
36279 | Is it not Ruskin who says of Velasquez, that there is more colour in his black than in many another painter''s whole palette? |
36279 | Is not this some indication of what is wanted in gardens? |
36279 | The pretty little Woodruff is in flower; what scent is so delicate as that of its leaves? |
36279 | What does it teach? |
36279 | What should we do in winter without its vigorous masses of grand foliage in garden and shrubbery, to say nothing of its use indoors? |
36279 | Why amethystine? |
36279 | Why is the orchard put out of the way, as it generally is, in some remote region beyond the kitchen garden and stables? |
36279 | and what on earth are you going to do with that great heap of sand? |
36279 | and would it really nod him a glad good- morning when he opened his window to greet it? |
36279 | are you quarrying stone, or is it for the cellar of a building? |