释义 |
Definition of foxglove in English: foxglovenoun ˈfɒksɡlʌvˈfɑksˌɡləv A tall Eurasian plant with erect spikes of pinkish-purple (or white) flowers shaped like the fingers of gloves. It is a source of the drug digitalis. Genus Digitalis, family Scrophulariaceae: many species, in particular D. purpurea Example sentencesExamples - Birch looks wonderful sitting in a mass of plants such as foxgloves, tellima and hellebores.
- Magnificent displays of bluebells are out just now and the ground vegetation also has an abundance of foxgloves, heath bedstraw and wood sorrel.
- Many other garden plants are also highly toxic, including rhubarb leaves, autumn crocuses, delphiniums, foxgloves and laburnum.
- Cut the bloom stalks off delphiniums, foxgloves, and hollyhocks as soon as they fade - but well before they set mature seed.
- But as container plants, foxgloves are present now in all sorts of generic and specific garden shops.
- In partial shade, use balloon flowers as accent plants placed among foxgloves, hostas, or lamb's ears.
- If I am diligent I can get an extra few weeks out of the delphiniums, foxgloves and monkshood by removing the spent blooms.
- Plants that may require staking to hold their blooms high include Canterbury bells, hollyhocks, and verbascums, with foxgloves and delphiniums in the upper garden zones.
- Ginger, garlic, mint, chives, red lettuce, red cabbage, sage, sunflower, fennel, foxglove, mint, chicory & endive seem to be less prone to slug attack.
- In early spring, fragile perennials, such as foxgloves and delphiniums, take center stage.
- The foxglove is a marvellous example of a plant which is adapted to be pollinated by insects.
- Other staples of the cottage garden include rosemary and lavender, pale pink peonies (short-lived but gorgeous), tall hollyhocks and foxgloves which like acid soil and do well in shade.
- With the onset of summer there's the cow parsley, poppies, honeysuckle, wild roses, speedwell, ragged robin and foxgloves.
- Then she mixed in foxgloves with flowers in closely related colors - pink, lilac, and lavender.
- True to Chris's intentions, the two acre garden is fresh with scent and the colours of cowslips and foxgloves, daffodils and dandelions.
- If, for instance, you have alkaline soil you can dig a large hole, fill it with ericaceous compost and grow acid-loving plants such as azalea and foxgloves.
- Digitalis, a heart medication, comes from the foxglove plant.
- Then came perennial beds with roses, lilies, foxgloves, lupins, daisies, shrubs, and more.
- Digitalis from the foxglove plants used by an old woman in Shropshire, England was analyzed and promoted for heart disease by Dr. William Withering in 1785 and was still widely used in herbal form until the 1950's.
- They also don't eat anemones, astilbes, junipers, foxgloves, daffodils, ferns, grasses and a whole host of things.
Definition of foxglove in US English: foxglovenounˈfɑksˌɡləvˈfäksˌɡləv A tall Eurasian plant with erect spikes of flowers, typically pinkish-purple or white, shaped like the fingers of gloves. It is a source of the drug digitalis. Genus Digitalis, family Scrophulariaceae: many species, in particular D. purpurea Example sentencesExamples - In early spring, fragile perennials, such as foxgloves and delphiniums, take center stage.
- Birch looks wonderful sitting in a mass of plants such as foxgloves, tellima and hellebores.
- If I am diligent I can get an extra few weeks out of the delphiniums, foxgloves and monkshood by removing the spent blooms.
- With the onset of summer there's the cow parsley, poppies, honeysuckle, wild roses, speedwell, ragged robin and foxgloves.
- But as container plants, foxgloves are present now in all sorts of generic and specific garden shops.
- The foxglove is a marvellous example of a plant which is adapted to be pollinated by insects.
- Ginger, garlic, mint, chives, red lettuce, red cabbage, sage, sunflower, fennel, foxglove, mint, chicory & endive seem to be less prone to slug attack.
- Magnificent displays of bluebells are out just now and the ground vegetation also has an abundance of foxgloves, heath bedstraw and wood sorrel.
- Digitalis from the foxglove plants used by an old woman in Shropshire, England was analyzed and promoted for heart disease by Dr. William Withering in 1785 and was still widely used in herbal form until the 1950's.
- True to Chris's intentions, the two acre garden is fresh with scent and the colours of cowslips and foxgloves, daffodils and dandelions.
- They also don't eat anemones, astilbes, junipers, foxgloves, daffodils, ferns, grasses and a whole host of things.
- Then she mixed in foxgloves with flowers in closely related colors - pink, lilac, and lavender.
- If, for instance, you have alkaline soil you can dig a large hole, fill it with ericaceous compost and grow acid-loving plants such as azalea and foxgloves.
- Cut the bloom stalks off delphiniums, foxgloves, and hollyhocks as soon as they fade - but well before they set mature seed.
- Then came perennial beds with roses, lilies, foxgloves, lupins, daisies, shrubs, and more.
- Many other garden plants are also highly toxic, including rhubarb leaves, autumn crocuses, delphiniums, foxgloves and laburnum.
- Other staples of the cottage garden include rosemary and lavender, pale pink peonies (short-lived but gorgeous), tall hollyhocks and foxgloves which like acid soil and do well in shade.
- Plants that may require staking to hold their blooms high include Canterbury bells, hollyhocks, and verbascums, with foxgloves and delphiniums in the upper garden zones.
- Digitalis, a heart medication, comes from the foxglove plant.
- In partial shade, use balloon flowers as accent plants placed among foxgloves, hostas, or lamb's ears.
|