This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
specific character and synonyms | 303 |
is a native of | 107 |
cape of good hope | 86 |
in reference to the | 81 |
a native of the | 73 |
in a compost of | 70 |
a synonym of a | 65 |
under a hand glass | 62 |
as well as the | 58 |
one of the best | 54 |
it is a native | 54 |
in a mixture of | 54 |
by parting its roots | 52 |
should be sown in | 50 |
under a bell glass | 50 |
a mixture of loam | 49 |
is one of the | 49 |
the base of the | 43 |
one of the most | 42 |
parting its roots in | 40 |
as long as the | 40 |
its roots in autumn | 37 |
under the name of | 37 |
longer than the leaves | 36 |
in the open border | 36 |
the axils of the | 36 |
in allusion to the | 35 |
during most of the | 34 |
a small genus of | 34 |
in a dense rosette | 33 |
three to four lines | 32 |
in a cold frame | 31 |
the plants should be | 31 |
propagated by parting its | 30 |
most of the summer | 30 |
to the height of | 30 |
native of the cape | 30 |
the top of the | 29 |
cordate at the base | 29 |
a synonym of b | 29 |
the cape of good | 28 |
at the same time | 28 |
and placed in a | 28 |
at the base of | 27 |
than those of the | 27 |
of loam and peat | 27 |
they thrive in a | 27 |
a compost of loam | 27 |
the length of the | 27 |
in a cool house | 27 |
in a pot of | 27 |
as soon as the | 27 |
one and a half | 26 |
the tops of the | 26 |
of easy culture in | 25 |
the royal garden at | 25 |
may be propagated by | 25 |
showing habit and flower | 24 |
mixture of loam and | 24 |
named in honour of | 24 |
from the axils of | 23 |
in ordinary garden soil | 23 |
a compost of peat | 23 |
are of easy culture | 23 |
in the open air | 23 |
thrive best in a | 23 |
they thrive best in | 23 |
it is a hardy | 22 |
a synonym of c | 22 |
royal garden at kew | 22 |
should be placed in | 22 |
to the royal garden | 22 |
varieties of this species | 22 |
in the open ground | 21 |
shorter than the leaves | 21 |
on each side of | 21 |
down to the rachis | 21 |
seeds should be sown | 20 |
the plants contained in | 20 |
as soon as ripe | 20 |
on the upper side | 20 |
for the most part | 20 |
it is one of | 20 |
each side of the | 20 |
it is propagated by | 20 |
care must be taken | 20 |
they are of easy | 19 |
should be grown in | 19 |
thrive well in a | 19 |
in almost any soil | 19 |
in may and june | 19 |
in sand under a | 19 |
introduced to this country | 19 |
thrive in a compost | 19 |
when the plants are | 19 |
well in a mixture | 19 |
cultivated in our gardens | 19 |
they thrive well in | 19 |
plants contained in the | 19 |
to four lines thick | 18 |
a variety of a | 18 |
names of the plants | 18 |
may be sown in | 18 |
middle three to four | 18 |
cut down to the | 18 |
a native of spain | 18 |
stove or greenhouse species | 18 |
is a hardy perennial | 18 |
of the plants contained | 18 |
by divisions of the | 18 |
three in a whorl | 17 |
to the rachis into | 17 |
sheathing at the base | 17 |
during the growing season | 17 |
about the end of | 17 |
a pot of sand | 17 |
introduced to the royal | 17 |
loam and leaf mould | 17 |
in the axils of | 17 |
flowers during most of | 17 |
be kept in a | 17 |
in the same manner | 17 |
there are several varieties | 17 |
which should be sown | 17 |
it is a very | 17 |
on the upper surface | 17 |
by the name of | 16 |
this is a very | 16 |
will root in sand | 16 |
the colour of the | 16 |
on the under side | 16 |
any soil or situation | 16 |
be sown in the | 16 |
may be grown in | 16 |
half to two lines | 16 |
a variety of b | 16 |
the surface of the | 16 |
the whole of the | 16 |
broad at the middle | 16 |
volume are alphabetically arranged | 16 |
we are indebted to | 16 |
sown in the spring | 16 |
may be increased by | 15 |
in june and july | 15 |
the ends of the | 15 |
on the lower side | 15 |
and a half to | 15 |
to forty in a | 15 |
the same treatment as | 15 |
readily propagated by cuttings | 15 |
one of the finest | 15 |
axils of the leaves | 15 |
with twelve to twenty | 15 |
tops of the branches | 15 |
is readily increased by | 15 |
the bottom of the | 15 |
a half to two | 14 |
for which we are | 14 |
be placed in a | 14 |
was introduced to the | 14 |
in the time of | 14 |
all the species are | 14 |
which we are indebted | 14 |
attenuated at the base | 14 |
at the tops of | 14 |
narrowed at the base | 14 |
in july and august | 14 |
fifteen to eighteen lines | 14 |
to eighteen lines long | 14 |
be grown in a | 14 |
at the end of | 14 |
compost of peat and | 14 |
of peat and loam | 14 |
is readily propagated by | 14 |
by division of the | 14 |
the borders of the | 14 |
and may be propagated | 14 |
propagated by cuttings of | 14 |
with a bell glass | 14 |
increased by parting its | 13 |
from the cape of | 13 |
readily increased by cuttings | 13 |
larger than those of | 13 |
broad above the middle | 13 |
at the top of | 13 |
seeds may be sown | 13 |
ones on each side | 13 |
borders of the flower | 13 |
introduced into this country | 13 |
of this genus are | 13 |
be planted in a | 13 |
in a gentle heat | 13 |
nearly to the edge | 13 |
our drawing was made | 13 |
and a half lines | 13 |
in the hortus kewensis | 13 |
early in the spring | 13 |
species of this genus | 13 |
well as the branches | 13 |
a genus of hardy | 13 |
the latter should be | 13 |
compost of loam and | 13 |
almost any soil or | 13 |
sown as soon as | 13 |
is one of those | 13 |
glass placed over them | 12 |
is propagated by parting | 12 |
be sown in spring | 12 |
there is also a | 12 |
the upper part of | 12 |
from the base of | 12 |
in the number of | 12 |
from the type in | 12 |
a great number of | 12 |
cultivated in this country | 12 |
truncate at the base | 12 |
compost of equal parts | 12 |
the colour of its | 12 |
in its wild state | 12 |
is usually propagated by | 12 |
must be taken to | 12 |
the best time to | 12 |
when they may be | 12 |
of the species are | 12 |
it thrives best in | 12 |
for the use of | 12 |
some of the species | 12 |
thirty to forty in | 12 |
the flowers of this | 12 |
green on the upper | 12 |
or three in a | 12 |
flowers in may and | 12 |
to four lines long | 12 |
a large number of | 12 |
requires the same treatment | 12 |
about the size of | 12 |
in the case of | 12 |
side of the midrib | 12 |
in a loamy soil | 11 |
upper part of the | 11 |
much longer than the | 11 |
a mixture of peat | 11 |
the same manner as | 11 |
of the same colour | 11 |
a very handsome species | 11 |
of the plants of | 11 |
where they are to | 11 |
a genus of elegant | 11 |
be sown as soon | 11 |
lateral ones on each | 11 |
flowers in june and | 11 |
be raised from seeds | 11 |
division of the roots | 11 |
in a young state | 11 |
differs from the type | 11 |
on account of its | 11 |
forms of this species | 11 |
root freely in sand | 11 |
a variety of this | 11 |
the size of a | 11 |
the extremities of the | 11 |
on the under surface | 11 |
the base of each | 11 |
a plant which flowered | 11 |
cuttings will root in | 11 |
there is a variety | 11 |
may be effected by | 11 |
is propagated by offsets | 11 |
a form of a | 11 |
is said to be | 11 |
closely allied to a | 11 |
twice as long as | 11 |
the form of the | 11 |
the size of the | 11 |
it flowers in june | 11 |
attenuated at both ends | 11 |
of this plant is | 11 |
four in a whorl | 11 |
to fifteen lines long | 11 |
be placed in the | 11 |
longer than the petioles | 11 |
a mixture of sand | 11 |
placed under a hand | 11 |
in the same way | 11 |
a compost of equal | 11 |
to twelve lines long | 11 |
during the summer months | 11 |
from a plant which | 11 |
twelve to fifteen lines | 11 |
those of the type | 11 |
at the ends of | 11 |
was cultivated by mr | 11 |
the rest of the | 11 |
to the form of | 11 |
in the colour of | 11 |
the best time for | 11 |
divisions of the roots | 11 |
it requires to be | 10 |
about the middle of | 10 |
thrives best in a | 10 |
best in a compost | 10 |
twenty in a dense | 10 |
a native of virginia | 10 |
be grown in pots | 10 |
by cuttings of the | 10 |
from which it differs | 10 |
become scientifically acquainted with | 10 |
placed in sandy soil | 10 |
appears to have been | 10 |
off at a joint | 10 |
with a hand glass | 10 |
genus of stove evergreen | 10 |
sandy loam and peat | 10 |
generic and specific characters | 10 |
the two sides unequal | 10 |
the beauty of the | 10 |
in common garden soil | 10 |
propagated by divisions of | 10 |
propagated by seeds and | 10 |
should be planted in | 10 |
for the purpose of | 10 |
spot at the base | 10 |
the edge of the | 10 |
to become scientifically acquainted | 10 |
on account of the | 10 |
flowers from may to | 10 |
forty in a dense | 10 |
to two lines long | 10 |
a large genus of | 10 |
colour of the flowers | 10 |
sand under a bell | 10 |
a genus of very | 10 |
it thrives well in | 10 |
flowers from june to | 10 |
any ordinary garden soil | 10 |
according to the celebrated | 10 |
the centre of the | 10 |
the soil should be | 10 |
of the flora londinensis | 10 |
large enough to handle | 10 |
will be necessary to | 10 |
the plants of this | 10 |
native of the south | 10 |
its seeds with us | 10 |
a half lines long | 10 |
with the addition of | 10 |
small genus of stove | 10 |
author of the flora | 10 |
as those of the | 10 |
pots of sandy soil | 10 |
of the summer months | 10 |
easy culture in ordinary | 10 |
it the name of | 10 |
to one and a | 10 |
they may be grown | 10 |
in the middle of | 10 |
cultivated in the open | 10 |
one to one and | 10 |
from the top of | 10 |
rounded at the base | 10 |
a mere form of | 10 |
cuneate at the base | 10 |
it flowers during most | 10 |
to twenty in a | 9 |
may be placed in | 9 |
like those of the | 9 |
if placed under a | 9 |
of which it is | 9 |
with the plants they | 9 |
they require to be | 9 |
of very easy culture | 9 |
on the top of | 9 |
in their natural colours | 9 |
is a very pretty | 9 |
to be found in | 9 |
the shape of the | 9 |
in a warm situation | 9 |
in pots of sandy | 9 |
with a terminal pinna | 9 |
of a deep green | 9 |
disposed in a terminal | 9 |
the shelter of a | 9 |
are accurately represented in | 9 |
the height of three | 9 |
to which are added | 9 |
the end of april | 9 |
in a sessile rosette | 9 |
sold by the principal | 9 |
accurately represented in their | 9 |
the end of the | 9 |
propagated by seeds or | 9 |
smaller than those of | 9 |
whence its name of | 9 |
intended for the use | 9 |
are well adapted for | 9 |
one of the handsomest | 9 |
they should then be | 9 |
a genus of stove | 9 |
they should be placed | 9 |
like that of the | 9 |
the use of such | 9 |
represented in their natural | 9 |
which the latin names | 9 |
of some of the | 9 |
english names of the | 9 |
a very pretty little | 9 |
seed should be sown | 9 |
allowed to get dry | 9 |
scientifically acquainted with the | 9 |
acquainted with the plants | 9 |
it is necessary to | 9 |
a compost of sandy | 9 |
by the principal booksellers | 9 |
latin names of the | 9 |
two to three lines | 9 |
they may be removed | 9 |
will root freely in | 9 |
most approved methods of | 9 |
use of such ladies | 9 |
in the form of | 9 |
the most approved methods | 9 |
be sown in a | 9 |
mere form of a | 9 |
most ornamental foreign plants | 9 |
an abundance of water | 9 |
the middle of the | 9 |
work intended for the | 9 |
together with the most | 9 |
of the cape of | 9 |
their places of growth | 9 |
of the south of | 9 |
the one here figured | 9 |
and sold by the | 9 |
of a light green | 9 |
the plant here figured | 9 |
as soon as they | 9 |
it is best to | 9 |
it is found to | 9 |
in which the english | 9 |
in spring or autumn | 9 |
the base on the | 9 |
which the most ornamental | 9 |
plants of this genus | 9 |
belonging to this genus | 9 |
the latin names of | 9 |
and one of the | 9 |
best in a mixture | 9 |
grow in almost any | 9 |
and times of flowering | 9 |
placed in a cold | 9 |
require a compost of | 9 |
professor of botany at | 9 |
propagation may be effected | 9 |
six to eight lines | 9 |
in the upper part | 9 |
which the english names | 9 |
a very pretty species | 9 |
the best of which | 9 |
principal booksellers in great | 9 |
the plants they cultivate | 9 |
the english names of | 9 |
it will be necessary | 9 |
the most ornamental foreign | 9 |
a work intended for | 9 |
peduncles longer than the | 9 |
not be allowed to | 9 |
in which the most | 9 |
easy culture in a | 9 |
with a profusion of | 9 |
thrive in almost any | 9 |
though a native of | 9 |
tapering at the base | 9 |
the principal booksellers in | 9 |
thriving best in a | 9 |
with the most approved | 9 |
in which the latin | 9 |
approved methods of culture | 9 |
same treatment as the | 8 |
principally in two rows | 8 |
figured in this work | 8 |
flowers in the open | 8 |
it may be propagated | 8 |
succeeds best in a | 8 |
it may also be | 8 |
is by far the | 8 |
if placed in sand | 8 |
drawing was made from | 8 |
placed under a bell | 8 |
it is an annual | 8 |
and is propagated by | 8 |
the lower one obliquely | 8 |
is a variety with | 8 |
from june to august | 8 |
in light rich soil | 8 |
the addition of a | 8 |
colour of its flowers | 8 |
they should be planted | 8 |
will thrive in almost | 8 |
pedicels three to four | 8 |
taken off at a | 8 |
no this species of | 8 |
most of the species | 8 |
longer than the calyx | 8 |
to the shape of | 8 |
a compost of two | 8 |
two or three weeks | 8 |
of sandy loam and | 8 |
in rich sandy loam | 8 |
they must be kept | 8 |
as wish to become | 8 |
foot and a half | 8 |
was drawn from a | 8 |
this is one of | 8 |
the rim of the | 8 |
they are intended to | 8 |
full of pellucid dots | 8 |
species belonging to this | 8 |
and placed under a | 8 |
are indebted to messrs | 8 |
for the sake of | 8 |
in the th edition | 8 |
and was introduced to | 8 |
a very rare and | 8 |
a variety of it | 8 |
it thrives in a | 8 |
planted out in the | 8 |
the type in having | 8 |
is the only species | 8 |
variety of it with | 8 |
its place of growth | 8 |
be allowed to get | 8 |
genus of hardy herbaceous | 8 |
the seed should be | 8 |
known in this country | 8 |
without spots or lines | 8 |
be increased by cuttings | 8 |
from whence it was | 8 |
culture in ordinary garden | 8 |
like most of the | 8 |
be taken not to | 8 |
the tips of the | 8 |
should be sown as | 8 |
young cuttings will root | 8 |
the south of france | 8 |
a native of germany | 8 |
will grow in almost | 8 |
wish to become scientifically | 8 |
if the plants are | 8 |
species is a native | 8 |
may be kept in | 8 |
by far the most | 8 |
propagated by dividing the | 8 |
the end of may | 8 |
a garden synonym of | 8 |
be propagated by cuttings | 8 |
in our gardens in | 8 |
the apices of the | 8 |
as an ornamental plant | 8 |
care should be taken | 8 |
a foot and a | 8 |
through the winter in | 8 |
are several varieties of | 8 |
in which they are | 8 |
the south of europe | 8 |
in any ordinary garden | 8 |
the th edition of | 8 |
most of the year | 8 |
it is said to | 8 |
towards the end of | 8 |
is a variety of | 8 |
the beauty of its | 8 |
than any of the | 8 |
ripens its seeds with | 8 |
at the extremities of | 8 |
the following are the | 8 |
and other parts of | 8 |
the time of miller | 8 |
be sown in march | 8 |
the plants must be | 8 |
in which it is | 8 |
with the exception of | 8 |
latter should be sown | 8 |
which it may be | 8 |
best of which are | 8 |
reaching nearly to the | 8 |
that it is a | 8 |
sand under a hand | 8 |
to twelve pairs of | 8 |
much shorter than the | 8 |
this species is a | 7 |
the lower ones in | 7 |
for a few days | 7 |
on the tops of | 7 |
soon as the plants | 7 |
is the only one | 7 |
position on the rockery | 7 |
may be had to | 7 |
is said to have | 7 |
in the south of | 7 |
the species are very | 7 |
tapering to the base | 7 |
by offsets from the | 7 |
twice the length of | 7 |
for the beauty of | 7 |
grows to the height | 7 |
the hortus kewensis of | 7 |
to which it is | 7 |
was made from a | 7 |
the flowers of the | 7 |
to eight lines broad | 7 |
a little longer than | 7 |
to twenty pairs of | 7 |
and will thrive in | 7 |
in march or april | 7 |
in the more southern | 7 |
they should be kept | 7 |
by which the plant | 7 |
the apex of the | 7 |
when they should be | 7 |
it flowers from june | 7 |
to be sown in | 7 |
should then be placed | 7 |
lowest of which are | 7 |
the name of a | 7 |
of the other species | 7 |
it is to be | 7 |
only species in cultivation | 7 |
whence it was introduced | 7 |
sori principally in two | 7 |
there are numerous varieties | 7 |
genus of very ornamental | 7 |
with one or two | 7 |
temperature of from deg | 7 |
was introduced by mr | 7 |
in a dense spike | 7 |
when the seedlings are | 7 |
length of the calyx | 7 |
they should be potted | 7 |
of which there are | 7 |
culture in a compost | 7 |
they require a compost | 7 |
in the centre of | 7 |
of barren fronds in | 7 |
the present species of | 7 |
a liberal supply of | 7 |
the plant may be | 7 |
lower one obliquely truncate | 7 |
from july to september | 7 |
planted in a pot | 7 |
with a firm texture | 7 |
they are to remain | 7 |
the latter end of | 7 |
is a plant of | 7 |
may also be raised | 7 |
it is desired to | 7 |
well as the petioles | 7 |
falling short of the | 7 |
from time to time | 7 |
be sown in pots | 7 |
of the best and | 7 |
the lowest of which | 7 |
the only species in | 7 |
one of the many | 7 |
the height of six | 7 |
liberal supply of water | 7 |
the best and most | 7 |
five to six lines | 7 |
of the young shoots | 7 |
thrive in a mixture | 7 |
hortus kewensis of mr | 7 |
a hardy herbaceous plant | 7 |
in the collection of | 7 |
of the best varieties | 7 |
when the plant is | 7 |
six in a whorl | 7 |
in a temperature of | 7 |
most of the plants | 7 |
thick at the base | 7 |
as a native of | 7 |
when large enough to | 7 |
liberal supplies of water | 7 |
informs us that it | 7 |
our gardens in the | 7 |
in the lower part | 7 |
as a stove plant | 7 |
our figure was drawn | 7 |
two or three times | 7 |
a very distinct species | 7 |
to the beauty of | 7 |
inhabitant of our gardens | 7 |
in the island of | 7 |
which are produced in | 7 |
of equal parts loam | 7 |
thirds of the way | 7 |
a very distinct and | 7 |
the protection of a | 7 |
a foot in height | 7 |
a deep green colour | 7 |
as the plants are | 7 |
the lower part narrowed | 7 |
those of the involucrum | 7 |
the most beautiful of | 7 |
way down to the | 7 |
little longer than the | 7 |
the pots should be | 7 |
the upper and outer | 7 |
from june to september | 7 |
allusion to the form | 7 |
shrubby at the base | 7 |
a very pretty form | 7 |
ends of the branches | 7 |
with a mixture of | 7 |
two or three years | 7 |
to ten pairs of | 7 |
exposed to the sun | 7 |
sown in the open | 7 |
bifid at the apex | 7 |
to sixteen lines long | 7 |
and is readily increased | 7 |
divisions of the root | 7 |
it flowers in may | 7 |
compost of sandy loam | 7 |
a large order of | 7 |
in autumn or spring | 7 |
is propagated by seeds | 7 |
native of the east | 7 |
it is usually propagated | 7 |
colour of its blossoms | 7 |
and rooting at the | 7 |
in all its parts | 7 |
to thirty in a | 7 |
flowers of this plant | 7 |
cut down to a | 7 |
of the most beautiful | 7 |
beauty of its flowers | 7 |
those of the branches | 7 |
hairy on both surfaces | 7 |
a genus of ornamental | 7 |
numerous varieties of this | 7 |
for a considerable time | 7 |
and is readily propagated | 7 |
as long since as | 7 |
of the present plant | 6 |
and plunged into a | 6 |
in september and october | 6 |
bell glass placed over | 6 |
narrowed gradually towards the | 6 |
those of the common | 6 |
most of them are | 6 |
it differs from the | 6 |
usually propagated by cuttings | 6 |
in a moderate heat | 6 |
two rows near the | 6 |
should be taken off | 6 |
the soil in which | 6 |
in pots or boxes | 6 |
which they may be | 6 |
sown in the autumn | 6 |
abundant supply of water | 6 |
at the foot of | 6 |
for any length of | 6 |
a light green colour | 6 |
out of doors in | 6 |
and flowers during most | 6 |
are indebted to mr | 6 |
should be potted off | 6 |
those of the stem | 6 |
or they may be | 6 |
propagated either by seeds | 6 |
natives of the cape | 6 |
half as long as | 6 |
the flowers are produced | 6 |
a hand glass placed | 6 |
by dividing the roots | 6 |
drawn from a plant | 6 |
cuttings root freely in | 6 |
in a common hot | 6 |
suprema definente in tubulum | 6 |
placed in a pot | 6 |
a more or less | 6 |
showing flower and habit | 6 |
a genus of pretty | 6 |
any length of time | 6 |
be had to flower | 6 |
it is impossible to | 6 |
rounded at the apex | 6 |
the majority of the | 6 |
hand glass placed over | 6 |
the whole under surface | 6 |
placed in sand under | 6 |
figure was drawn from | 6 |
times longer than the | 6 |
thrives in a compost | 6 |
rarely ripens its seeds | 6 |
than in the type | 6 |
in two or three | 6 |
broad at the base | 6 |
to those of the | 6 |
a rich sandy loam | 6 |
of loam and leaf | 6 |
the seedlings are large | 6 |
by offsets and seeds | 6 |
several varieties of this | 6 |
the same way as | 6 |
the tube of the | 6 |
has long been cultivated | 6 |
the species of this | 6 |
be increased by parting | 6 |
seedlings are large enough | 6 |
downy on both surfaces | 6 |
the leaves of the | 6 |
as many of the | 6 |
a light rich soil | 6 |
in diameter when expanded | 6 |
they should be grown | 6 |
and covered with a | 6 |
are produced on the | 6 |
they are to be | 6 |
from base to apex | 6 |
nine to twelve lines | 6 |
filamenta fauci tubi inserta | 6 |
being a native of | 6 |
to eight pairs of | 6 |
should be kept in | 6 |
in brilliancy of colour | 6 |
as it is a | 6 |
showing habit and flowers | 6 |
above the rim of | 6 |
is easily propagated by | 6 |
in the open borders | 6 |
they may be planted | 6 |
is a very beautiful | 6 |
to which they are | 6 |
with two pairs of | 6 |
or in the open | 6 |
on the banks of | 6 |
where they are intended | 6 |
the sides of the | 6 |
a profusion of bloom | 6 |
at the base on | 6 |
edition of the syst | 6 |
of this species of | 6 |
a bell glass placed | 6 |
be sown on a | 6 |
so soon as the | 6 |
in april and may | 6 |
propagation is effected by | 6 |
a garden hybrid between | 6 |
are large enough to | 6 |
is found to be | 6 |
to three lines long | 6 |
ones on long petioles | 6 |
surface of the soil | 6 |
made of the young | 6 |
the number of its | 6 |
they may be placed | 6 |
extremities of the branches | 6 |
it has long been | 6 |
are the most important | 6 |
sandy loam and leaf | 6 |
temperature of about deg | 6 |
a very beautiful species | 6 |
or planted out in | 6 |
to the depth of | 6 |
flowers with us in | 6 |
was cultivated here by | 6 |
in two rows near | 6 |
glabrous on both surfaces | 6 |
flowers from july to | 6 |
large genus of stove | 6 |
to three pairs of | 6 |
as a greenhouse plant | 6 |
a good supply of | 6 |
also be raised from | 6 |
they are all of | 6 |
the time of parkinson | 6 |
form of this species | 6 |
and is usually propagated | 6 |
of the upper leaves | 6 |
it was introduced to | 6 |
very closely allied to | 6 |
for the decoration of | 6 |
by sir joseph banks | 6 |
increased by division of | 6 |
easily propagated by cuttings | 6 |
tapering to a point | 6 |
furnished with a few | 6 |
they may be kept | 6 |
made from a plant | 6 |
obliquely truncate at the | 6 |
the beginning of may | 6 |
produced from the axils | 6 |
in pots or pans | 6 |
loam and bog earth | 6 |
of this species are | 6 |
are well worth growing | 6 |
when the sun shines | 6 |
in the stove of | 6 |
a very fine variety | 6 |
in reference to its | 6 |
they should be sown | 6 |
of the hortus kewensis | 6 |
part of the summer | 6 |
seeds in this country | 6 |
many of the species | 6 |
in loam and peat | 6 |
bottom of the pot | 6 |
in a growing state | 6 |
said to be a | 6 |
the lobes of the | 6 |
a native of africa | 6 |
longer than the flowers | 6 |
this genus is now | 6 |
may be treated as | 6 |
twenty to thirty in | 6 |
twelve to twenty in | 6 |
produced in great abundance | 6 |
root readily in sand | 6 |
by which it is | 6 |
garden synonym of a | 6 |
they are well adapted | 6 |
in a few weeks | 6 |
short of the edge | 6 |
long as the sepals | 6 |
fronds with a terminal | 6 |
lacinia suprema definente in | 6 |
height of three feet | 6 |
in april or may | 6 |
the species are of | 6 |
in sandy soil in | 6 |
at the university of | 6 |
the end of august | 6 |
the open border in | 6 |
soil is most suitable | 6 |
of the most ornamental | 6 |
rather shorter than the | 6 |
in a few days | 6 |
it is readily propagated | 6 |
on a gentle hot | 6 |
the height of about | 6 |
the largeness of its | 6 |
the usual mode of | 6 |
to be planted in | 6 |
name of this plant | 6 |
placed in a warm | 6 |
it is a plant | 6 |
racemes from the axils | 6 |
pot of sandy soil | 6 |
or a mixture of | 6 |
as well as in | 6 |
where the soil is | 5 |
when the roots have | 5 |
if placed in a | 5 |
the summit of the | 5 |
freely in a mixture | 5 |
mucronate at the apex | 5 |
more southern parts of | 5 |
water at the roots | 5 |
to the middle of | 5 |
if planted in sand | 5 |
the plants are in | 5 |
is by no means | 5 |
be removed into the | 5 |
compost of two parts | 5 |
it is well suited | 5 |
figure of this plant | 5 |
the winter in a | 5 |
and a compost of | 5 |
which have been introduced | 5 |
the sepals and petals | 5 |
an excellent example of | 5 |
the severity of our | 5 |
usually increased by cuttings | 5 |
and requires the same | 5 |
if it is desired | 5 |
distributed in both hemispheres | 5 |
file made using scans | 5 |
of which there is | 5 |
scarcely longer than the | 5 |
grow freely in a | 5 |
from which it is | 5 |
one of which is | 5 |
lobed at the apex | 5 |
of the lower leaves | 5 |
a greenhouse evergreen shrub | 5 |
may be planted out | 5 |
plants which have been | 5 |
it is desirable to | 5 |
any of the others | 5 |
narrowed at both ends | 5 |
also be increased by | 5 |
a distinct genus of | 5 |
to be a native | 5 |
evergreen trees or shrubs | 5 |
a copious supply of | 5 |
in the winter season | 5 |
may be removed to | 5 |
it begins to flower | 5 |
using scans of public | 5 |
then be placed in | 5 |
culture in common garden | 5 |
sepals and petals white | 5 |
a native of china | 5 |
they thrive in any | 5 |
edge more or less | 5 |
was introduced to this | 5 |
if planted in a | 5 |
in any ordinary soil | 5 |
loam and leaf soil | 5 |
a temperature of deg | 5 |
thirty in a dense | 5 |
fifteen to sixteen lines | 5 |
describes it as a | 5 |
a temperature of about | 5 |
the middle of april | 5 |
be propagated by seeds | 5 |
are enumerated in the | 5 |
be grown in the | 5 |
as is also the | 5 |
the more southern parts | 5 |
to keep the plants | 5 |
may be distinguished by | 5 |
in a north border | 5 |
root in sand under | 5 |
in march and april | 5 |
as one of the | 5 |
disposed in racemes along | 5 |
at the bottom of | 5 |
a rich loamy soil | 5 |
printed by couchman and | 5 |
be kept in pots | 5 |
rising from the axils | 5 |
said to have been | 5 |
are of easy cultivation | 5 |
lower part of the | 5 |
in a sheltered situation | 5 |
is most readily propagated | 5 |
from the same root | 5 |
in the spring with | 5 |
the margins of the | 5 |
it was cultivated in | 5 |
the back of the | 5 |
about the same length | 5 |
within these few years | 5 |
mixture of sandy loam | 5 |
soon as ripe in | 5 |
part of the flower | 5 |
in his garden of | 5 |
scaly at the base | 5 |
it rarely ripens its | 5 |
a native of sicily | 5 |
are very suitable for | 5 |
a compost of fibrous | 5 |
a hardy greenhouse plant | 5 |
addition of a little | 5 |
in length to the | 5 |
with an odd one | 5 |
than the barren ones | 5 |
informs us in his | 5 |
a native of switzerland | 5 |
with twenty to thirty | 5 |
than those of a | 5 |
into a moderate hot | 5 |
the best mode of | 5 |
large as those of | 5 |
of the creeping kind | 5 |
does not appear to | 5 |
the height of two | 5 |
the number of their | 5 |
root freely in a | 5 |
the brilliancy of its | 5 |
of excellent form and | 5 |
of three or four | 5 |
rather large genus of | 5 |
definente in tubulum capillarem | 5 |
the mouth of the | 5 |
spring and early summer | 5 |
of light and air | 5 |
the end of june | 5 |
be removed to a | 5 |
by seeds and divisions | 5 |
are to be sown | 5 |
smooth on both surfaces | 5 |
about the latter end | 5 |
the roots in spring | 5 |
as large as a | 5 |
as early as possible | 5 |
in any light soil | 5 |
a considerable time in | 5 |
or more in length | 5 |
to six lines long | 5 |
are numerous varieties of | 5 |
many pairs of leaflets | 5 |
species of the genus | 5 |
the upper edge rounded | 5 |
in the months of | 5 |
of sand and peat | 5 |
are large and shewy | 5 |
sown out of doors | 5 |
ornamental greenhouse evergreen shrubs | 5 |
should be allowed to | 5 |
the seeds should be | 5 |
been introduced to this | 5 |
domain works at the | 5 |
shorter than the stem | 5 |
a situation moderately moist | 5 |
the best of the | 5 |
is not so much | 5 |
garden hybrid between b | 5 |
two to three pairs | 5 |
which are of a | 5 |
fertile fronds much smaller | 5 |
increased by seeds and | 5 |
water should be given | 5 |
and ripens its seeds | 5 |
scans of public domain | 5 |
works at the university | 5 |
cuttings of the half | 5 |
about as long as | 5 |
these should be sown | 5 |
a genus of greenhouse | 5 |
of trees or shrubs | 5 |
acuminated at both ends | 5 |
propagated by offsets from | 5 |
an abundant supply of | 5 |
one of leaf mould | 5 |
the university of georgia | 5 |
will grow freely in | 5 |
the end of march | 5 |
a height of ft | 5 |
be easily propagated by | 5 |
ripened cuttings will root | 5 |
gradually towards the point | 5 |
is a very hardy | 5 |
of one of the | 5 |
very large genus of | 5 |
the glass as possible | 5 |
should be covered with | 5 |
to fifty in a | 5 |
and those of the | 5 |
the top of each | 5 |
made using scans of | 5 |
a very pretty plant | 5 |
printed by stephen couchman | 5 |
under surface of the | 5 |
planted out in a | 5 |
in many parts of | 5 |
coarsely toothed at the | 5 |
where the plants are | 5 |
grows spontaneously on the | 5 |
some of the best | 5 |
the beds should be | 5 |
produced in great profusion | 5 |
evergreen shrubs or trees | 5 |
stove evergreen trees or | 5 |
which flowered this spring | 5 |
well as the calyces | 5 |
number of its stamina | 5 |
there are many varieties | 5 |
much larger than those | 5 |
placed in a gentle | 5 |
are of a fine | 5 |
round the upper and | 5 |
in the possession of | 5 |
months of june and | 5 |
small genus of hardy | 5 |
close to this species | 5 |
widely distributed in both | 5 |
it will be found | 5 |
when grown in a | 5 |
disposed in terminal racemes | 5 |
will be found beneficial | 5 |
th edition of the | 5 |
a place in the | 5 |
sepals and petals yellow | 5 |
with one to three | 5 |
one of the first | 5 |
which may be added | 5 |
rim of the pot | 5 |
in a small pot | 5 |
the crown of the | 5 |
well in any ordinary | 5 |
which should be placed | 5 |
the young shoots are | 5 |
easily propagated by parting | 5 |
either in pots or | 5 |
sow the seeds in | 5 |
equal in length to | 5 |
in the cultivation of | 5 |
begins to flower in | 5 |
liable to be killed | 5 |
any light rich soil | 5 |
in the month of | 5 |
on the upper part | 5 |
and kept in a | 5 |
and place in a | 5 |
with a large terminal | 5 |
shorter than the calyx | 5 |
in the spring of | 5 |
no a native of | 5 |
on the inner surface | 5 |
beset with glandular hairs | 5 |
never be allowed to | 5 |
cuttings will root freely | 5 |
peduncles opposite the leaves | 5 |
thrive in any ordinary | 5 |
a variety of the | 5 |
of loam and bog | 5 |
twice the size of | 5 |
the lower obliquely truncate | 5 |
between the midrib and | 5 |
it flowers from july | 5 |
on short axillary peduncles | 5 |
to the attacks of | 5 |
in the english gardens | 5 |
a very handsome stove | 5 |
be removed from the | 5 |
to which may be | 5 |
of those plants which | 5 |
quite to the rachis | 5 |
auricled at the base | 5 |
of the finest form | 5 |
of june and july | 5 |
axils of the upper | 5 |
closely allied to the | 5 |
the appearance of a | 5 |
root readily if planted | 5 |
following are the most | 5 |
in the royal garden | 5 |
be propagated by parting | 5 |
readily increased by parting | 5 |
thrives well in a | 5 |
a dense spike ft | 5 |
may be easily propagated | 5 |
the months of june | 5 |
of good form and | 5 |
half the length of | 5 |
but it must be | 5 |
readily if planted in | 5 |
during the season of | 5 |
should not be allowed | 5 |
far as we have | 5 |
will be found to | 5 |
acute at both ends | 5 |
the cuttings should be | 5 |
covered with a bell | 5 |
since the time of | 5 |
an opportunity of seeing | 5 |
this differs from the | 5 |
white at the base | 5 |
of the old world | 5 |
the middle of june | 5 |
to have been introduced | 5 |
in racemes along the | 5 |
be covered with a | 5 |
from the base to | 5 |
mixture of sand and | 5 |
one of the species | 5 |
a common name for | 5 |
toothed at the apex | 5 |
sori in two rows | 5 |
shrubs or small trees | 5 |
to have been cultivated | 5 |
an extensive genus of | 5 |
by couchman and fry | 5 |
the publication of the | 5 |
species are of easy | 5 |
they are of a | 5 |
lower side obliquely truncate | 5 |
of public domain works | 5 |
require to be kept | 5 |
they delight in a | 5 |
close to the midrib | 5 |
but little water is | 5 |
scales of the strobiles | 5 |
to six pairs of | 5 |
a very handsome greenhouse | 5 |
public domain works at | 5 |
base on the lower | 5 |
the under side of | 5 |
a genus of handsome | 5 |
lower ones on long | 5 |
but care must be | 5 |
they may remain until | 5 |
mode of propagating it | 5 |
kept in a pot | 5 |
there are two varieties | 5 |
should be taken to | 5 |
stove or warm greenhouse | 5 |
of hardy herbaceous perennials | 5 |
native of the alps | 4 |
and is increased by | 4 |
the beauty of their | 4 |
an elegant genus of | 4 |
those of the species | 4 |
they should be allowed | 4 |
old inhabitant of our | 4 |
to stand the winter | 4 |
are liable to be | 4 |
us that it was | 4 |
be one of the | 4 |
in honour of john | 4 |
on the nerves beneath | 4 |
the present plant is | 4 |
in a warm greenhouse | 4 |
increased by divisions of | 4 |
flowers early in the | 4 |
equal parts loam and | 4 |
naturalised here and there | 4 |
in autumn or early | 4 |
it is necessary that | 4 |
is usually increased by | 4 |
covered with a hand | 4 |
be raised from seed | 4 |
water may be given | 4 |
or by parting its | 4 |
in a dense sessile | 4 |
with a very short | 4 |
must not be allowed | 4 |
which it is distinguished | 4 |
the lower line nearly | 4 |
a light loamy soil | 4 |
twice or three times | 4 |
with more or less | 4 |
where they may remain | 4 |
truncate on the lower | 4 |
lobes of the upper | 4 |
and keep in a | 4 |
the roots should be | 4 |
about the length of | 4 |
from plant to plant | 4 |
with many of the | 4 |
make their appearance in | 4 |
two or three in | 4 |
best time to divide | 4 |
to plant it in | 4 |
nearly or quite to | 4 |
the rachis into numerous | 4 |
genus of epiphytal orchids | 4 |
or by young cuttings | 4 |
of this there are | 4 |
is closely allied to | 4 |
usually propagated by parting | 4 |
upper and outer edge | 4 |
best in a warm | 4 |
out of doors during | 4 |
it in the stove | 4 |
what country it is | 4 |
plant in this country | 4 |
of it in his | 4 |
will be fit to | 4 |
and flowers in june | 4 |
appearing before the leaves | 4 |
root freely in sandy | 4 |
above the surface of | 4 |
varieties of this plant | 4 |
may be planted in | 4 |
from which we learn | 4 |
are a great number | 4 |
order of trees or | 4 |
when in a young | 4 |
which are about in | 4 |
form a kind of | 4 |
to have a succession | 4 |
from below the middle | 4 |
in a moist heat | 4 |
is best grown in | 4 |
smaller than the barren | 4 |
as far as we | 4 |
a long time in | 4 |
in a certain degree | 4 |
propagating it is by | 4 |
by dividing the pseudo | 4 |
name of one of | 4 |
to the greatest advantage | 4 |
by the addition of | 4 |
pale band down the | 4 |
is distinguished by the | 4 |
a new genus of | 4 |
a peat and loam | 4 |
of easy cultivation in | 4 |
in an equal mixture | 4 |
they may also be | 4 |
is also a very | 4 |
with a view to | 4 |
with some sharp sand | 4 |
contained in the fourth | 4 |
from the midrib nearly | 4 |
in the matter of | 4 |
autumn or early spring | 4 |
with a yellow eye | 4 |
length of the leaf | 4 |
in a house or | 4 |
so as to give | 4 |
gardens in the time | 4 |
a magnificent stove species | 4 |
each side the midrib | 4 |
be sown thinly in | 4 |
of extremely easy culture | 4 |
if the weather be | 4 |
it takes the name | 4 |
cuttings made of the | 4 |
a bell glass in | 4 |
where it has been | 4 |
in an open situation | 4 |
those of the barren | 4 |
in the third edition | 4 |
be placed over the | 4 |
in a stove or | 4 |
in a sheltered spot | 4 |
the body of the | 4 |
top of each stem | 4 |
by means of a | 4 |
genus of very pretty | 4 |
is a hardy annual | 4 |
will be found under | 4 |
connected at the base | 4 |
in the same spot | 4 |
on the borders of | 4 |
the size of those | 4 |
it in his parad | 4 |
by cuttings or layers | 4 |
should not be planted | 4 |
the specimens we have | 4 |
they grow well in | 4 |
best grown in a | 4 |
lower line nearly straight | 4 |
a bottom heat of | 4 |
a temperature of from | 4 |
to six to a | 4 |
grows wild in the | 4 |
to keep the whole | 4 |
readily propagated by parting | 4 |
to a great extent | 4 |
well as that of | 4 |
almost any garden soil | 4 |
and when the plants | 4 |
soon after they are | 4 |
the seedlings may be | 4 |
deserves a place in | 4 |
takes the name of | 4 |
parts of the country | 4 |
of which the following | 4 |
with two rows of | 4 |
part narrowed very gradually | 4 |
there are two or | 4 |
same length as the | 4 |
and peat in equal | 4 |
the base of a | 4 |
by cuttings made of | 4 |
each of which is | 4 |
it as a native | 4 |
be placed in sandy | 4 |
when the pots are | 4 |
is the one most | 4 |
others of the same | 4 |
placed in a frame | 4 |
will root in a | 4 |
there are one or | 4 |
having been cultivated by | 4 |
which it differs in | 4 |
it flowers in july | 4 |
a most distinct and | 4 |
in the lower half | 4 |
of any of their | 4 |
to be kept in | 4 |
rounded on the back | 4 |
be sown in april | 4 |
hairs on both surfaces | 4 |
the plants will be | 4 |
the botanic garden at | 4 |
same treatment as other | 4 |
a piece of ground | 4 |
no grows spontaneously in | 4 |
disposed in a long | 4 |
are to be found | 4 |
sori in a continuous | 4 |
mixture of peat and | 4 |
from the end of | 4 |
the supply of water | 4 |
upper lip of corolla | 4 |
to be killed by | 4 |
there are a great | 4 |
apple or codlin grub | 4 |
of the flower garden | 4 |
cool house or frame | 4 |
the time of gerard | 4 |
a cool house or | 4 |
the greatest part of | 4 |
already figured in this | 4 |
and thrive best in | 4 |
to this country by | 4 |
the middle or end | 4 |
about thirty in a | 4 |
to be quite hardy | 4 |
it must not be | 4 |
or three times a | 4 |
plants are large enough | 4 |
the plants may be | 4 |
about twenty in a | 4 |
be grown on the | 4 |
the common treatment of | 4 |
above the height of | 4 |
the approach of winter | 4 |
should be planted on | 4 |
may be sown as | 4 |
was cultivated in this | 4 |
be placed under the | 4 |
above the dilated base | 4 |
the blossoms of the | 4 |
much smaller than the | 4 |
it may be kept | 4 |
borders where they are | 4 |
order of herbs or | 4 |
is also a white | 4 |
bottom heat of about | 4 |
the fragrance of its | 4 |
and may be increased | 4 |
peat and loam compost | 4 |
it is closely allied | 4 |
which are disposed in | 4 |
surface of the ground | 4 |
placed in a temperature | 4 |
very easy culture in | 4 |
by the old botanists | 4 |
planted in a well | 4 |
with some of the | 4 |
an ornamental greenhouse evergreen | 4 |
and the colour of | 4 |
the scales of the | 4 |
it is most commonly | 4 |
than in the species | 4 |
by dividing the plants | 4 |
well in a compost | 4 |
gave it the name | 4 |
a brisk bottom heat | 4 |
several of the species | 4 |
stove evergreen shrubs or | 4 |
soon as they have | 4 |
any of the other | 4 |
the gardens of the | 4 |
best in a rich | 4 |
the species may be | 4 |
middle or end of | 4 |
one of the largest | 4 |
is most suitable for | 4 |
double the length of | 4 |
than that of the | 4 |
is a hardy greenhouse | 4 |
and requiring the same | 4 |
of its being a | 4 |
are of a pale | 4 |
and flowers from may | 4 |
the latter is the | 4 |
the height of the | 4 |
it grows spontaneously in | 4 |
a native of italy | 4 |
tropics of the old | 4 |
of water at the | 4 |
the upper side of | 4 |
to the size of | 4 |
in consequence of the | 4 |
or quite to the | 4 |
in a peat and | 4 |
as we have observed | 4 |
more or less lobed | 4 |
great care must be | 4 |
three times longer than | 4 |
greater part of the | 4 |
as well as on | 4 |
fronds much smaller than | 4 |
eight in a whorl | 4 |
very rare and pretty | 4 |
proper name of this | 4 |
nearly to the rachis | 4 |
to this country from | 4 |
in the gardens of | 4 |
a native of a | 4 |
the plant is in | 4 |
bracts at the base | 4 |
branched at the base | 4 |
was cultivated in the | 4 |
to the length of | 4 |
and continues to blossom | 4 |
plant which flowered in | 4 |
all of easy culture | 4 |
that it was cultivated | 4 |
in a sandy soil | 4 |
it may be had | 4 |
are mere forms of | 4 |
the spring with other | 4 |
are intended to remain | 4 |
soon as they are | 4 |
band down the centre | 4 |
the lower side obliquely | 4 |
may also be increased | 4 |
figured it in his | 4 |
and a half high | 4 |
the proper name of | 4 |
very early in the | 4 |
and well worth growing | 4 |
regions of both hemispheres | 4 |
clothed with rusty tomentum | 4 |
we have seen it | 4 |
will root in sandy | 4 |
be propagated either by | 4 |
in a stemless rosette | 4 |
planted in the open | 4 |
and placed in sand | 4 |
in a common green | 4 |
a place in all | 4 |
and distinct stove species | 4 |
and is one of | 4 |
in a cool frame | 4 |
easy culture in common | 4 |
they will thrive in | 4 |
a considerable number of | 4 |
to nine pairs of | 4 |
best in a soil | 4 |
suddenly at the base | 4 |
of the way up | 4 |
kept in the stove | 4 |
are all of easy | 4 |
to eight in a | 4 |
root if placed in | 4 |
it will become a | 4 |
they should not be | 4 |
as broad as long | 4 |
the most ornamental of | 4 |
where they will be | 4 |
yellow at the base | 4 |
garden of pleasant flowers | 4 |
racemes along the axillary | 4 |
it may be grown | 4 |
thriving in a compost | 4 |
it is not a | 4 |
may be said to | 4 |
species in cultivation is | 4 |
it will grow in | 4 |
thrives in a mixture | 4 |
rooting at the apex | 4 |
the midrib nearly to | 4 |
to be raised from | 4 |
the leaves of this | 4 |
the stems of the | 4 |
it grows naturally in | 4 |
by seeds and cuttings | 4 |
in point of colour | 4 |
mixed with a little | 4 |
done in early spring | 4 |
till the end of | 4 |
three or four feet | 4 |
each pinna bearing about | 4 |
we are indebted for | 4 |
should be removed into | 4 |
base of the lip | 4 |
there are few flowers | 4 |
till the beginning of | 4 |
rich sandy loam and | 4 |
to three lines broad | 4 |
this is a rare | 4 |
four to six pairs | 4 |
the midrib or edge | 4 |
as its name imports | 4 |
and require to be | 4 |
round the outer edge | 4 |
a very handsome variety | 4 |
and one of leaf | 4 |
variety of this plant | 4 |
greatest part of the | 4 |
all of which are | 4 |
the upper nearly parallel | 4 |
in this country by | 4 |
from may to september | 4 |
side of the stem | 4 |
the handsomest of the | 4 |
native of the levant | 4 |
six to eight pairs | 4 |
by seeds or cuttings | 4 |
this is an elegant | 4 |
be a native of | 4 |
fourth volume are alphabetically | 4 |
should be sown early | 4 |
height of six or | 4 |
to be one of | 4 |
are rarely seen in | 4 |
to two lines deep | 4 |
rich fibrous loam and | 4 |
to a depth of | 4 |
teeth on each side | 4 |
and planted in a | 4 |
an equal mixture of | 4 |
and flowers in may | 4 |
on a warm border | 4 |
hardy evergreen shrubs or | 4 |
for a short time | 4 |
is a charming little | 4 |
plunged into a moderate | 4 |
the smoke of london | 4 |
long been cultivated in | 4 |
found to be a | 4 |
centre of the flower | 4 |
common in our gardens | 4 |
rather longer than the | 4 |
if not identical with | 4 |
the seeds of this | 4 |
of stove evergreen trees | 4 |
very handsome stove evergreen | 4 |
a light sandy soil | 4 |
may be propagated either | 4 |
are admirably adapted for | 4 |
midrib nearly to the | 4 |
should be put in | 4 |
except where otherwise stated | 4 |
but it may be | 4 |
in the borders of | 4 |
heat of about deg | 4 |
cuttings of the young | 4 |
the same time as | 4 |
must be taken not | 4 |
mixed with the soil | 4 |
the numerous varieties of | 4 |
placed in an airy | 4 |
fifty in a dense | 4 |
this plant in the | 4 |
six to a segment | 4 |
crested at the apices | 4 |
the rays of the | 4 |
cultivated here by mr | 4 |
many of the genus | 4 |
it succeeds best in | 4 |
nearly as long as | 4 |
at the base and | 4 |
reference to the form | 4 |
in the neighbourhood of | 4 |
at the tips of | 4 |
nearly or quite sessile | 4 |
lateral lobes of lip | 4 |
the appearance of the | 4 |
segments of the perianth | 4 |
they are apt to | 4 |
the blossoms of this | 4 |
the foot of a | 4 |
keep it in the | 4 |
aiton informs us that | 4 |
require to be carefully | 4 |
in other respects like | 4 |
in two regular rows | 4 |
are of the easiest | 4 |
in the following spring | 4 |
more or less deeply | 4 |
from may to july | 4 |
that it was introduced | 4 |
showing habit and detached | 4 |
the axils of two | 4 |
there is only one | 4 |
an excellent subject for | 4 |
at the time of | 4 |
be potted off singly | 4 |
the fourth volume are | 4 |
the top of which | 4 |
of peat and sand | 4 |
cuttings root readily if | 4 |
it should be grown | 4 |
sandy soil under a | 4 |
fully exposed to the | 4 |
be raised in a | 4 |
connected beyond the middle | 4 |
are among the most | 4 |
near the glass as | 4 |
any of their leaves | 4 |
to five in a | 4 |
on each side the | 4 |
placed in a cool | 4 |
far the most common | 4 |
are more or less | 4 |
other respects like the | 4 |
as well as by | 4 |
in the wild garden | 4 |
received seeds of it | 4 |
but the flowers are | 4 |
of this genus there | 4 |
a sheet of glass | 4 |
of three to five | 4 |
in the shape of | 4 |
size of a pea | 4 |
which the plant is | 4 |
we learn that it | 4 |
clothed with adpressed hairs | 4 |
and they should be | 4 |
after they are ripe | 4 |
known under the name | 4 |
of the most useful | 4 |
half shorter than the | 4 |
copious supply of water | 4 |
so that it is | 4 |
which are apt to | 4 |
there are several species | 4 |
from seeds sown in | 4 |
and flowers in the | 4 |
beneath and on the | 4 |
from june to october | 4 |
the greenhouse species are | 4 |
it is well known | 4 |
very large and free | 4 |
cuttings root readily in | 4 |
in most of the | 4 |
mixture of turfy loam | 4 |
cuttings of the roots | 4 |
the borders where they | 4 |
to a height of | 4 |
and at the same | 4 |
as it does not | 4 |
flowers in our gardens | 4 |
very handsome stove species | 4 |
with twenty to forty | 4 |
sand to keep the | 4 |
enumerated in the hort | 4 |
the end of july | 4 |
the greater part of | 4 |
of what country it | 4 |
are one or two | 4 |
about as large as | 4 |
one or two varieties | 4 |
of more humble growth | 4 |
with eight to twelve | 4 |
will thrive in any | 4 |
of a deep purple | 4 |
in february or march | 4 |
of the systema vegetabilium | 4 |
filled with a mixture | 4 |
longer than the segments | 4 |
young cuttings root freely | 4 |
for the plants to | 4 |
when planted out in | 4 |
is the best time | 4 |
its bulk of water | 4 |
on a dense spike | 4 |
should be well drained | 4 |
with a terminal central | 4 |
other parts of north | 4 |
was introduced into this | 4 |
water must be given | 4 |
a mixture of turfy | 4 |
of all the species | 4 |
put down in the | 4 |
specimens we have seen | 4 |
of the upper edge | 4 |
shoots will root in | 4 |
handsomest of the genus | 4 |
severity of our climate | 4 |
excellent example of the | 4 |
long since as the | 4 |
may be raised from | 4 |
has figured and described | 4 |
green on both surfaces | 4 |
have a succession of | 4 |
the margins of lakes | 4 |
as possible in the | 4 |
reaching either the midrib | 4 |
clothed with velvety pubescence | 4 |
a few years since | 4 |
as well as that | 4 |
to the end of | 4 |
in a light sandy | 4 |
as it is not | 4 |
the base to the | 4 |
by seeds and offsets | 4 |
one of those plants | 4 |
of hardy herbaceous plants | 4 |
of propagating it is | 4 |
not reaching either the | 4 |
with four to six | 4 |
soil in which it | 4 |
disposed in a loose | 4 |
in size to the | 4 |
account of its beauty | 4 |
a soil composed of | 4 |
are easily cultivated in | 4 |
of a bright red | 4 |
a rather large genus | 4 |
either the midrib or | 4 |
in a similar compost | 4 |
it is distinguished by | 4 |
and the flowers are | 4 |
from the hortus kewensis | 4 |
be kept moderately dry | 4 |
placed in a shady | 4 |
grows spontaneously in the | 4 |
a very large genus | 4 |
and plunged in a | 4 |
as near the glass | 4 |
with a little peat | 4 |
the end of october | 4 |
is a hardy herbaceous | 4 |
the name of the | 4 |
in honour of dr | 4 |
to keep it in | 4 |
is a very desirable | 4 |
planted in a warm | 4 |
superior to the type | 4 |
not appear to be | 4 |
spring with other annuals | 4 |
species are enumerated in | 4 |
they should be removed | 4 |
narrowed suddenly at the | 4 |
be treated as a | 4 |
but this is not | 4 |
middle three lines thick | 4 |
one to two lines | 4 |
ornamental stove evergreen trees | 4 |
eight to ten pairs | 4 |
cuneated at the base | 4 |
in which it grows | 4 |
the genera best known | 4 |
pedicels nine to twelve | 4 |
as much as possible | 4 |
seed may be sown | 4 |
all the year round | 4 |
rarely seen in cultivation | 4 |
comes close to this | 4 |
two varieties of it | 4 |
which should be taken | 4 |
since as the year | 4 |
in this country as | 4 |
the beginning of april | 4 |
in the greenhouse or | 4 |
pedicels longer than the | 4 |
must be sown in | 4 |
the trivial name of | 4 |
the former is the | 4 |
most beautiful of the | 4 |
in point of beauty | 4 |
is propagated by layers | 4 |
the third edition of | 4 |
in gardens under the | 4 |
a little turfy loam | 4 |
lower part narrowed very | 4 |
must be kept in | 4 |
are of sufficient size | 4 |
narrowed gradually to a | 4 |
it is not necessary | 4 |
grown in a greenhouse | 4 |
as well as of | 4 |
it is most readily | 4 |
ciliated on the margins | 4 |
be sown early in | 4 |
in honour of a | 4 |
his garden of pleasant | 4 |
on all suitable occasions | 4 |
temperature ranging from deg | 4 |
there are several other | 4 |
to that of the | 4 |
in the fourth volume | 4 |
rows near the midrib | 4 |
channelled above the base | 3 |
after which they may | 3 |
is one of our | 3 |
the middle of september | 3 |
either by seeds or | 3 |
the depth of in | 3 |
if they are to | 3 |
is desired to increase | 3 |
generally cultivated in our | 3 |
respects like the type | 3 |
axils of the two | 3 |
seen in our gardens | 3 |
very handsome greenhouse evergreen | 3 |
covering nearly the whole | 3 |
wall or piece of | 3 |
to the base of | 3 |
from may to october | 3 |
in pans in a | 3 |
produce an abundance of | 3 |
to thirteen pairs of | 3 |
by suckers or layers | 3 |
which it is not | 3 |
to the open border | 3 |
supply of water at | 3 |
liable to injury from | 3 |
parts loam and peat | 3 |
plants are thoroughly established | 3 |
country it is a | 3 |
as in the genera | 3 |
species is distinguished by | 3 |
the arrangement of the | 3 |
exceeds a foot in | 3 |
of the flowers of | 3 |
stem shrubby at the | 3 |
the best place for | 3 |
with eight to ten | 3 |
according to the hort | 3 |
or beginning of june | 3 |
the best way to | 3 |
in a situation moderately | 3 |
is a very handsome | 3 |
placed under a glass | 3 |
others of the genus | 3 |
divided nearly to the | 3 |
for a long time | 3 |
leafy at the base | 3 |
from those of the | 3 |
four or five in | 3 |
be placed in an | 3 |
of which are branched | 3 |
and tapering to a | 3 |
length of the leaves | 3 |
which it is closely | 3 |
than the lateral ones | 3 |
height of about two | 3 |
in a greater degree | 3 |
on both sides at | 3 |
here figured is a | 3 |
country in the year | 3 |
to forty pairs of | 3 |
with those of the | 3 |
sepals and petals bright | 3 |
of the linnean society | 3 |
well as the stalks | 3 |
the open air during | 3 |
this very handsome species | 3 |
apart in the rows | 3 |
acquiring the height of | 3 |
sometimes tinged with red | 3 |
till the following spring | 3 |
hardy than we imagine | 3 |
a very common and | 3 |
will succeed very well | 3 |
an extensive order of | 3 |
may be removed from | 3 |
hence its name of | 3 |
in the opinion of | 3 |
for two or three | 3 |
long as the leaves | 3 |
stems of the trees | 3 |
bearing two to three | 3 |
of a paler hue | 3 |
should be turned out | 3 |
capsule with one large | 3 |
large pots or tubs | 3 |
they are of extremely | 3 |
two or three varieties | 3 |
twisted at the base | 3 |
habit dwarf and free | 3 |
the house in which | 3 |
a very moist atmosphere | 3 |
three to four pinnate | 3 |
its seeds in this | 3 |
a very elegant species | 3 |
whence the seeds were | 3 |
plant it in a | 3 |
well as on the | 3 |
only one worth growing | 3 |
propagated by cuttings made | 3 |
in pots placed in | 3 |
in the corn fields | 3 |
of those of the | 3 |
it as a biennial | 3 |
equal parts turfy loam | 3 |
most of this tribe | 3 |
if suffered to grow | 3 |
will succeed with the | 3 |
size of those of | 3 |
forms a pleasing contrast | 3 |
shorter than the petioles | 3 |
a very attractive variety | 3 |
be lifted and stored | 3 |
well adapted for rockwork | 3 |
fifteen to twenty pairs | 3 |
freely in sandy soil | 3 |
are to be obtained | 3 |
flowers will be produced | 3 |
the plants free from | 3 |
on the plants of | 3 |
are increased by cuttings | 3 |
genus of hardy evergreen | 3 |
supply of water during | 3 |
in the ordinary border | 3 |
pans in a cold | 3 |
it is the only | 3 |
are raised from seeds | 3 |
forty to fifty in | 3 |
moderate stove in winter | 3 |
in a shady position | 3 |
on the alps of | 3 |
good example of the | 3 |
top of the pseudo | 3 |
are largely employed in | 3 |
in the university of | 3 |
of the flower being | 3 |
gemmiferous at the apex | 3 |
of water during the | 3 |
which it is usually | 3 |
small genus of pretty | 3 |
hen and chickens daisy | 3 |
brilliancy of its colours | 3 |
propagated by young cuttings | 3 |
about half as long | 3 |
the culture of this | 3 |
trifid at the apex | 3 |
mixture of fibrous peat | 3 |
subjects for pot culture | 3 |
it may be increased | 3 |
or two of the | 3 |
lobed at the base | 3 |
of a yellow colour | 3 |
are of a beautiful | 3 |
succeeds best when planted | 3 |
evergreen shrub from the | 3 |
but they are not | 3 |
it will flower in | 3 |
be placed singly in | 3 |
a variety only of | 3 |
partial to this tribe | 3 |
of very humble growth | 3 |
loam and one of | 3 |
red at the base | 3 |
loam and peat in | 3 |
evergreen shrubs or small | 3 |
top of the petiole | 3 |
it as a plant | 3 |
it appears from the | 3 |
in the usual way | 3 |
and are increased by | 3 |
is propagated by cuttings | 3 |
pots or pans of | 3 |
the height of several | 3 |
the disposition of the | 3 |
on the th of | 3 |
of doors during summer | 3 |
freely in sandy loam | 3 |
a loamy soil and | 3 |
in any light rich | 3 |
they commence to grow | 3 |
beauty of the flowers | 3 |
by whom it was | 3 |
curve on the lower | 3 |
is a greenhouse plant | 3 |
requiring a compost of | 3 |
height of several feet | 3 |
may be seen in | 3 |
which our drawing was | 3 |
a beautiful appearance when | 3 |
four to five lines | 3 |
and calyces clothed with | 3 |
in rich gritty soil | 3 |
is of modern introduction | 3 |
celebrated author of the | 3 |
a very elegant stove | 3 |
fifty to eighty in | 3 |
is a shrub of | 3 |
the only way to | 3 |
plants must be kept | 3 |
and succeeds best in | 3 |
one here figured is | 3 |
a synonym of physurus | 3 |
in axillary or terminal | 3 |
a warm position on | 3 |
and was introduced by | 3 |
be carefully taken up | 3 |
bearing thirty to forty | 3 |
time the plants are | 3 |
it has been considered | 3 |
during the spring months | 3 |
of a foot and | 3 |
its foliage and flowers | 3 |
a greater degree than | 3 |
it was first introduced | 3 |
scales of involucre nearly | 3 |
the most suitable soil | 3 |
in its single state | 3 |
they should be transplanted | 3 |
it appears to be | 3 |
naturally in the island | 3 |
seeds sown in the | 3 |
a good depth of | 3 |
in cultivation is the | 3 |
they should be thinned | 3 |
it should be kept | 3 |
of the many plants | 3 |
to this species of | 3 |
it is a most | 3 |
have been introduced into | 3 |
in very sandy soil | 3 |
including the thyrsoid panicle | 3 |
a succession of flowers | 3 |
of a fine yellow | 3 |
an inhabitant of our | 3 |
upper edge of the | 3 |
easily increased by cuttings | 3 |
of the old ones | 3 |
propagated by ripened cuttings | 3 |
they may be propagated | 3 |
can hardly be too | 3 |
it is of course | 3 |
of four or five | 3 |
in axillary and terminal | 3 |
of about two feet | 3 |
suitable for its culture | 3 |
during the summer season | 3 |
in the beginning of | 3 |
they are designed to | 3 |
flowers in july and | 3 |
for the front of | 3 |
to the requirements of | 3 |
the finest and most | 3 |
the form of its | 3 |
and in very severe | 3 |
narrowed to an acute | 3 |
may be added a | 3 |
those of the involucre | 3 |
obtuse at both ends | 3 |
four or five feet | 3 |
it does not accord | 3 |
the only sure method | 3 |
this country from the | 3 |
the lower ones distinctly | 3 |
flowers from april to | 3 |
from allied genera in | 3 |
is certainly one of | 3 |
to consider it as | 3 |
was taken from a | 3 |
in this country in | 3 |
it requires a rich | 3 |
seeds of it from | 3 |
freely in sand under | 3 |
is probably the best | 3 |
pure air and a | 3 |
of which are again | 3 |
three or four weeks | 3 |
if grown in pots | 3 |
shape as the sorus | 3 |
great length of time | 3 |
placed in a moderate | 3 |
very rarely met with | 3 |
a very old inhabitant | 3 |
to us to be | 3 |
a handsome stove evergreen | 3 |
entire at the base | 3 |
pedicels two to three | 3 |
sown in a pot | 3 |
base of the column | 3 |
thrive in ordinary garden | 3 |
it flowers from may | 3 |
which are branched again | 3 |
most ornamental of the | 3 |
in any soil or | 3 |
pubescent on both surfaces | 3 |
few plants are more | 3 |
in reference to a | 3 |
when grown in pots | 3 |
in two parallel rows | 3 |
six to twelve lines | 3 |
be kept through the | 3 |
the base narrowed suddenly | 3 |
pots placed in a | 3 |
shining green on the | 3 |
in an open border | 3 |
in pots or planted | 3 |
broadly sheathing at the | 3 |
should be raised in | 3 |
grown in a compost | 3 |
a wall or piece | 3 |
is an excellent subject | 3 |
a great deal of | 3 |
with a few hairs | 3 |
are not so much | 3 |
edition of his dictionary | 3 |
the soil most suitable | 3 |
one and the same | 3 |
this should not be | 3 |
they should always have | 3 |
to the disposition of | 3 |
ustulate at the apex | 3 |
in the appearance of | 3 |
requires to be planted | 3 |
a very handsome hardy | 3 |
the use of the | 3 |
peat in equal proportions | 3 |
this pretty species is | 3 |
under a common hot | 3 |
be gradually hardened off | 3 |
on the upper and | 3 |
as often as the | 3 |
the exception of a | 3 |
and one or two | 3 |
propagated by offsets and | 3 |
if the season prove | 3 |
genera best known are | 3 |
of this plant are | 3 |
as large as those | 3 |
in a rich loamy | 3 |
kept through the winter | 3 |
majority of the species | 3 |
slight protection in winter | 3 |
they may be increased | 3 |
it is a greenhouse | 3 |
one of the showiest | 3 |
summer temperature of deg | 3 |
placed out of doors | 3 |
a wall with a | 3 |
and nearly as much | 3 |
as in the type | 3 |
peduncles axillary and terminal | 3 |
of very short duration | 3 |
covered with short hairs | 3 |
more hardy than we | 3 |
readily in sandy soil | 3 |
green in the centre | 3 |
it varies with white | 3 |
as that of the | 3 |
as a variety of | 3 |
of the roots in | 3 |
are well filled with | 3 |
a good example of | 3 |
should be taken in | 3 |
the course of the | 3 |
good form and size | 3 |
so as to prevent | 3 |
the close of summer | 3 |
pinnules on each side | 3 |
which are covered with | 3 |
of the height of | 3 |
of the blossoms of | 3 |
they should be taken | 3 |
form of its leaves | 3 |
ripened shoots will root | 3 |
vexillum vix alis longius | 3 |
the rachis into a | 3 |
of five or six | 3 |
aiton regards it as | 3 |
a warm sunny position | 3 |
may be kept through | 3 |
to a place in | 3 |
in a moist soil | 3 |
in a good greenhouse | 3 |
crown of the plant | 3 |
soil most suitable for | 3 |
root freely under a | 3 |
species thrives in a | 3 |
plant which flowered this | 3 |
very distinct and free | 3 |
are attached to the | 3 |
met with in gardens | 3 |
three times a week | 3 |
if they can be | 3 |
part of the house | 3 |
woolly on both surfaces | 3 |
a synonym of tsuga | 3 |
are very useful in | 3 |
all the species enumerated | 3 |
they may then be | 3 |
rarely seen in our | 3 |
a very desirable sort | 3 |
is at all times | 3 |
spring and summer months | 3 |
it is absolutely necessary | 3 |
three to five in | 3 |
the neighbourhood of london | 3 |
is increased by offsets | 3 |
forty pairs of linear | 3 |
the banks of the | 3 |
by cuttings of half | 3 |
ornamental greenhouse evergreen shrub | 3 |
a day or two | 3 |
a pot of sandy | 3 |
easily raised from seed | 3 |
to eighty in a | 3 |
pedicels twelve to fifteen | 3 |
introduced into our gardens | 3 |
increased by cuttings in | 3 |
and as it is | 3 |
best in a light | 3 |
resembling those of a | 3 |
he received seeds of | 3 |
this country by mr | 3 |
regards it as a | 3 |
are designed to remain | 3 |
mentions a variety of | 3 |
part of the day | 3 |
to be a very | 3 |
a light sandy loam | 3 |
in the stove or | 3 |
contracted in the middle | 3 |
flowers in march and | 3 |
six to nine lines | 3 |
in pots in the | 3 |
banks of the river | 3 |
early as possible in | 3 |
are for the most | 3 |
divisions of the plant | 3 |
four to six to | 3 |
the open air in | 3 |
same shape as the | 3 |
when expanded by the | 3 |
all its parts than | 3 |
with a little sand | 3 |
proofreaders europe at http | 3 |
the southern parts of | 3 |
covered by a hand | 3 |
gardens under the name | 3 |
are produced in great | 3 |
from which they differ | 3 |
it is not uncommon | 3 |
by careful divisions of | 3 |
of most of the | 3 |
better than many others | 3 |
so that the whole | 3 |
it is apt to | 3 |
times its bulk of | 3 |
size of a cherry | 3 |
of the plant here | 3 |
the lowest the largest | 3 |
edge of the frond | 3 |
its parts of fructification | 3 |
a little extra heat | 3 |
been cultivated by mr | 3 |
in a dry soil | 3 |
bell glass over them | 3 |
same way as the | 3 |
species for the rockery | 3 |
in spring in a | 3 |
two pairs of leaflets | 3 |
shorter than the scape | 3 |
placed in the open | 3 |
entire or slightly undulated | 3 |
best in a loamy | 3 |
scales of involucre lanceolate | 3 |
is of easy culture | 3 |
and a number of | 3 |
in proportion to its | 3 |
the one most commonly | 3 |
are propagated by seeds | 3 |
but there is a | 3 |
three varieties of this | 3 |
within a few inches | 3 |
have been obtained by | 3 |
in very severe seasons | 3 |
toothed at the base | 3 |
of very ornamental hardy | 3 |
in pots for the | 3 |
present species is a | 3 |
nearly parallel with it | 3 |
a mixture of bog | 3 |
with a network of | 3 |
grow well in a | 3 |
of gerard and parkinson | 3 |
two to three on | 3 |
they may be sown | 3 |
it is in flower | 3 |
base to the apex | 3 |
good supply of water | 3 |
with a very long | 3 |
warm position on the | 3 |
ripen its seeds in | 3 |
covered with ferruginous hairs | 3 |
the characters of the | 3 |
a temperature ranging from | 3 |
very handsome greenhouse species | 3 |
being liable to be | 3 |
two varieties of this | 3 |
clothed with hoary tomentum | 3 |
be effected by seeds | 3 |
in a cool greenhouse | 3 |
a very different plant | 3 |
larger than the others | 3 |
three or four together | 3 |
the sake of variety | 3 |
not enumerated in the | 3 |
so that the plant | 3 |
is a very different | 3 |
to the brilliancy of | 3 |
a suitable plant for | 3 |
to the growth of | 3 |
in a loose raceme | 3 |
at the rate of | 3 |
new genus of it | 3 |
the upper side narrowed | 3 |
of the finest of | 3 |
three feet or more | 3 |
shrub from the cape | 3 |
the majority of species | 3 |
pots or planted out | 3 |
are easily raised from | 3 |
native of the west | 3 |
ripened wood will strike | 3 |
liable to the attacks | 3 |
clothed with glandular hairs | 3 |
it is properly a | 3 |
in a line with | 3 |
the summits of the | 3 |
wild in the corn | 3 |
but it is not | 3 |
once in two or | 3 |
be potted off into | 3 |
the flowers will be | 3 |
of the warmer parts | 3 |
its parts than the | 3 |
will thrive in ordinary | 3 |
which may be sown | 3 |