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67 Sentences With "Queen Anne's lace"

How to use Queen Anne's lace in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "Queen Anne's lace" and check conjugation/comparative form for "Queen Anne's lace". Mastering all the usages of "Queen Anne's lace" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Actually, the name Queen Anne's lace is a North American invention.
The vineyard floor was covered in grasses, and Queen Anne's lace were blooming.
Interestingly, not every flower of the Queen Anne's lace bears the single darkly colored floret.
Drifts of rain-heavy Queen Anne's Lace and butterfly weed added muted dabs of color.
Queen Anne's lace can be identified by its white flowers which often have a purple center.
Queen Anne's lace, also known as wild carrot, prefers conditions like these, in bright full sun.
And recipes abound, ranging from fried flower heads to Queen Anne's lace jelly — traditionally dyed bright pink.
However, Queen Anne's lace, is edible and is related to dill and cilantro, according to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden.
Epic's headquarters were a short drive away, down a meandering road through countryside dotted with Queen Anne's lace and farm equipment.
But the plant isn't always easy to identify and can be easy to confuse with other flowering plants like Queen Anne's Lace.
Chocolate cosmos and Queen Anne's lace cascade around a few pale-pink rose buds, and it couldn't be more modern or elegant.
Giant hogweed can be confused with other similar looking relatives, like Queen Anne's lace and cow parsnip, which can also cause adverse reactions.
Wash it all down with a Queen Anne's lace cognac cocktail and you too may begin to appreciate the beauty in Queen Anne's spattered handiwork.
The weight of King Cotton and Queen Anne's lace drapes itself over the recording, and the sisters are very much aware of their identity as Southern women.
This plant can reach heights up to 14 feet tall, and hairy stalks and white flower clusters closely resemble the wild carrot (also known as Queen Anne's lace).
Miller and his helpers were poking the final flowers into the wreath—red anemones, blue and pink sweet peas, pink-and-green ornamental-cabbage stems, Queen Anne's lace.
The limestone glade is ringed by a kind of prairie — grasslands blooming outrageously with wildflowers: gray-headed coneflowers and Queen Anne's lace and butterfly weed and pasture roses.
She eschews as well most newly created dwarf hybrids that allow suburban gardeners to create tiny tableaus, instead embracing robust height in plants like Queen Anne's lace and purple-magenta ironweed.
Queen Anne's Lace, which is also known as wild carrot, is beautiful, harmless, and can be found in wedding bouquets and roadsides near you — so don't mistake it for the giant hogweed!
Only a decade ago, a photographer and three male models could trespass on the abandoned New York Central Railroad freight viaduct and work without interruption among the asters and Queen Anne's lace.
Issue #22003 notes that in Florida, aspiring heads were reportedly trying SANSERT, a new Sandoz drug for vascular headaches; teenagers in an unnamed location are reported to be smoking Queen Anne's Lace.
As passengers bob down the dirt path framed by Queen Anne's Lace and dandelions, the barn rising into view, they enter an experience Moeller says is difficult for him to put into words.
Even the flowering plant isn't always easy to identify and it may be confused with other flowering plants like Queen Anne's lace, which is harmless, often found in wedding bouquets, and has white flowers.
I drove out of Clatskanie along a two-lane highway lined with the Queen Anne's lace and logging supply stores and deer grazing in the vacant patches that had been cleared of their evergreens.
At my feet, wildflowers: sunshine yellow gentians high as my thighs; snow-colored narcissi; Queen Anne's lace; something purple and spindly; fragrant herbs; nettles that sting my ankles as I walk through them; tall grasses.
Accordingly, the pages of T were filled with unexpected arrangements, including clouds of Queen Anne's lace, swathes of Japanese knotweed and vases of rainbow-colored baby's breath, pastel-dyed orchids and flamboyant birds of paradise.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads AUCKLAND, New Zealand — Delicate and dainty, Queen Anne's Lace is a popular pick for wedding bouquets — but the white flower also has a long history as a naturally occurring contraceptive.
But the current obsession with these unruly plants — among them smoke bush, with its blowsy, imprecise purplish puffs; little tufts of mimosa; and Queen Anne's lace, which resembles a paralyzed mist — speaks to a larger cultural moment.
You might have some in your kitchen right now: Parsley, mugwort, pennyroyal, Queen Anne's lace seeds, and black cohosh all have abortive properties, and for centuries before institutionalized health care, women managed their reproductive health using plants like these.
So it'd really suck if Trump and company forced us back to a place where we all scrounge around for juniper to rub on our dicks and Queen Anne's Lace seeds to swallow for even the hope of protection.
But substances that recur in potions, or are still used today—like ground Queen Anne's Lace seeds, which comes up in ancient Greek texts and which Riddle notes some Appalachians still drink daily as a contraceptive—are good candidates for study.
The diaphanous charms of lunaria and hesperis add a certain softness, as do frothy pink thalictrums (up to nine feet tall here) and various members of the Queen Anne's lace tribe of umbellifers, with their umbrella-like sprays of flowers.
On one August afternoon, the structure's clapboard walls seem to be floating amid the dense cloud of flora that presses up against them: Delphinium, baptisia, fragrant mint and sprays of Queen Anne's lace are alive with heavy pollen-dusted bees.
Wending along roads punctuated with graceful elms, cornfields and riots of Queen Anne's lace and blue chicory, there's always another spot to explore or sit with something fresh from an orchard or farm stand (or a pint of Island Homemade Ice Cream, made in Grand Isle).
Mr. Woltz wanted to prepare me for the scene that greeted us when we walked through the gateway on Williamsburg Street West: not a traditional park in any sense, but a field of tall grasses sprinkled with blazing star, brown-eyed Susan, purple coneflower, butterflyweed, Queen Anne's lace and fleabane.
The scenery also happens to be every bit as gorgeous as whatever movie you've got playing in your mind: winding stone walls spotted with lichen, snaking over a pristine green hillside; dozens of sheep in the distance, like small puffs of smoke, seen through a field of Queen Anne's Lace.
So I picked up some garden roses and ranunculus, which evoked the look of peonies to me (look, there's about a foot of snow on the ground so I did what I could), and added Queen Anne's lace—the little white and green buds—because I liked the cheeky royal tie-in.
Indeed, air and space play as prominent a role as flora in Moreno-Bunge's bouquets, which often consist of a spare amount of willowy blooms: Queen Anne's lace, love-in-a-mist and pampas grass, all precisely anchored in a flower frog concealed by a squat vase, their ­needle-thin stems largely exposed.
The daughter of contemporary art gallerists, Barber moved from her native Sydney, Australia, in 2012 to Berlin, where, in her studio, Mary Lennox, she often crafts monumental Rorschach-like installations that seem not merely to defy gravity but to openly taunt it: armfuls of dried pampas grass, amaranth and loopy hops that hang from hooks on the ceiling; a geyser of translucent lunaria seedpods — glinting like silver dollars — in place of a chandelier in a Paris apartment; a staircase banister wrapped with cherry and orange boughs braided with Queen Anne's lace.
Due to physical similarities to Queen Anne's lace, giant hogweed and its relatives are sometimes mistaken as harmless plants.
Recent studies have confirmed the birth control properties of many of these plants, confirming for example that Queen Anne's lace has post coital anti-fertility properties. Queen Anne's lace is still used today for birth control in India. According to Norman E. Himes, most methods of birth control used in antiquity were probably ineffective. The single most effective method of birth control known in antiquity was probably coitus interruptus.
Long, long the death It dies in the white hours Of young-leafed June With chestnut flowers, With hedges snowlike strewn, White lilac bowed, Lost lanes of Queen Anne's lace, And that high-builded cloud Moving at summer's pace.
Ammi majus, commonly called bishop's weed, false bishop's weed, bullwort, greater ammi, lady's lace, false Queen Anne's lace, or laceflower, is a member of the carrot family Apiaceae. The plant, which has white lace-like flower clusters, is native to the Nile River Valley.
Lomatium bradshawii, also known as Bradshaw's desert parsley, is an endangered perennial herb native to Oregon and Washington, United States. Lomatium bradshawii was thought to be extinct until 1979, when it was rediscovered by a University of Oregon graduate.Lawton, Barbara Perry. Parsleys, Fennels, and Queen Anne's Lace.
Laurentian Mixed Forest nearly coincides with Northern Michigan Northern Michigan has many tree types including maple, birch, oak, ash, white cedar, aspen, pine, and beech. Ferns, milkweed, Queen Anne's lace, and chicory grow in the open fields and along roadsides. Forest plants include wild leeks, morel mushrooms, and trilliums. Marram grass grows on beaches.
Daucus carota, whose common names include wild carrot, bird's nest, bishop's lace, and Queen Anne's lace (North America), is a white, flowering plant in the family Apiaceae, native to temperate regions of Europe and southwest Asia, and naturalized to North America and Australia. Domesticated carrots are cultivars of a subspecies, Daucus carota subsp. sativus.
The larva spins a cocoon and pupates. Eventually, the hatching larva will eat the prey and emerge from the nest. Adults can be seen in mid-summer feeding on nectar at flowers, especially Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota), parsnips and water parsnips (Sium suave, Sium latifolium, Berula erecta). They have a low reproductive rate.
The USDA Forest Service states pigs and cattle can eat it without apparent harm. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation has had an active program to control giant hogweed since 2008. In 2011, Maine state horticulturists, describing the plant as "Queen Anne's lace on steroids", reported that it has been found at 21 different locations in Maine, with the number of plants ranging from one to a hundred.
The site is recognised by Reading Borough Council as an area of wildlife and historical interest, and examples of elm, walnut, ash, horse chestnut and sycamore trees grow there. Other flora found at the site include nettle, bramble and elder, with flowers such as lesser celandine, bluebells and Queen Anne's lace appearing in the spring. Peacock butterflies and various species of woodland bird are prevalent in the area.
The second park is located in the southwest of the district. It is a wetland biotope that is watered only with rainwater from the surrounding rooftops. Wild carrot (Queen Anne's lace) is the host plant for the caterpillars of the Old World swallowtail and grows at the border of the park. The nature reserve Freiburger Rieselfeld borders the district to the west and functions as a local recreation area for its residents.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of , of which is land and (1.0%) is water. It is the second- smallest county in Maryland by land area and smallest by total area. Daucus carota (Queen Anne's Lace) was designated as the official flower of Howard County in 1984. Howard County is located in the Piedmont Plateau region of Maryland, with rolling hills making up most of the landscape.
It is believed that the heart shape originated from the seed of this plant as they are the same shape and the plant was associated with love, romance, and sexuality. Although Silphium was most popular, there were many other plants and herbs used. The seeds of Queen Anne's Lace (a wild carrot) were cut up or chewed to release ingredients that inhibited fetal and ovarian growth. These seeds are still commonly used in India.
Sheep continued to be pastured on the island as of 2014. In 2014, the only structure of human origin on the island was the 30-by- stone building that was built by Russell Arundel and served as the capitol of Outer Baldonia. This building is in some disrepair, but the initial 'A' is still visible above the mantle. The vegetation of the island is predominantly aster, with Queen Anne's lace, tall grasses and vetch as well.
This is a list of places and things named after Anne, Queen of Great Britain, who reigned from 1702 to 1714. Not all things with "Queen Anne" in their name refer to Queen Anne (1665–1714). Anne's great grandmother Anne of Denmark, the queen consort of King James I of England, lent her name to the theatrical company Queen Anne's Men, and Cape Ann, Massachusetts. Both queens are credited with lending their name to the plant Queen Anne's lace.
Queen Anne's lace – Daucus carota Fruit cluster containing oval fruits with hooked spines The wild carrot is a herbaceous, somewhat variable biennial plant that grows between tall, and is roughly hairy, with a stiff, solid stem. The leaves are tripinnate, finely divided and lacy, and overall triangular in shape. The leaves are bristly and alternate in a pinnate pattern that separates into thin segments. The flowers are small and dull white, clustered in flat, dense umbels.
Local weed flora can be divided into two categories - non-native plants that have become invasive and threaten native flora as well as native southeastern North American plants if they interfere with intended and desirable plant growth. Some pasture weeds that were introduced from Europe are Canada thistle, chickweed, clover, corn speedwell, cornflower, dandelion, deptford pink, field sorrel, henbit, lambsquarters, Queen Anne's lace. Invasive weed grasses found in Mount Ulla vicinity are crabgrass, bermuda grass. Invasive vines are kudzu and Japanese honeysuckle.
Queen Anne's Lace provides shelter to nearby plants, as well as attracting predatory insects that eat pests like caterpillars, and may boost the productivity of tomato plants Many plants can grow intercropped in the same space, because they exist on different levels in the same area, providing ground cover or working as a trellis for each other. This healthier style of horticulture is called forest gardening. Larger plants provide a wind break or shelter from noonday sun for more delicate plants.
It is also sometimes called mother-die (especially in the UK), a name that is also applied to the common hawthorn. It is native to Europe, western Asia and northwestern Africa; in the south of its range in the Mediterranean region, it is limited to higher altitudes. It is related to other diverse members of Apiaceae, such as parsley, carrot, hemlock and hogweed. It is often confused with Daucus carota which is known as Queen Anne's lace or wild carrot, also a member of the Apiaceae.
Tomatoes serve, or are served by, a large variety of companion plants. Among the most famous pairings is the tomato plant and carrots; studies supporting this relationship have produced a popular book about companion planting, Carrots Love Tomatoes. The devastating tomato hornworm has a major predator in various parasitic wasps, whose larvae devour the hornworm, but whose adult form drinks nectar from tiny-flowered plants like umbellifers. Several species of umbellifer are therefore often grown with tomato plants, including parsley, Queen Anne's lace, and occasionally dill.
D. carota was introduced and naturalized in North America, where it is often known as Queen Anne's lace. Both Anne, Queen of Great Britain, and her great grandmother, Anne of Denmark, are taken to be the Queen Anne for whom the plant is named. It is so called because the flower resembles lace, prominent in fine clothing of the day; the red flower in the center is thought to represent a blood droplet where Queen Anne pricked herself with a needle when she was making the lace.
Possibly due to its supposed effectiveness and thus desirability, by the first century AD, it had become so rare that it was worth more than its weight in silver and, by late antiquity, it was fully extinct. Asafoetida, a close relative of siliphion, was also used for its contraceptive properties. Other plants commonly used for birth control in ancient Greece include Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota), willow, date palm, pomegranate, pennyroyal, artemisia, myrrh, and rue. Some of these plants are toxic and ancient Greek documents specify safe dosages.
The uncultivated parts of the island are mainly covered in an invasive non-native species, such as reed canary grass, holly, Himalayan blackberries, tansy, St Johns wort, oxeye daisies and stinky Bob. Some common native plants on the island are common rushes, reeds and sedges, cattails and mud disks. Other native plants on the island include yarrow, Queen Anne's lace (Anthriscus sylvestris), lady and sword ferns, blue aster, thistles, sweet pea, clovers, rose hips, fireweed, plantain, a stand of dead cottonwoods Populus sect. Aigeiros. Corn and wheat are also planted on the island by contract farmers.
Trichopoda pennipes first appears in the late spring or early summer and feeds on nectar sucked from flowers such as Queen Anne's lace and meadowsweet. It may be seen hovering over other plants in search of suitable bugs on which to lay its eggs, most commonly squash bugs and southern green stinkbugs. The female fly lays several small, pale-coloured, oval eggs on a large nymph or an adult bug. In fact the larvae are parasitoids of several true bugs, particularly squash bugs and leaf-footed bugs in the family Coreidae (including the large-sized Leptoglossus occidentalis), stinkbugs in the family Pentatomidae and other pentatomorph bugs (Largidae and Scutelleridae species).
Of the plants that exist at Fajã dos Cubres the predominant species include, the sharp-pointed rush (Juncus acutus), along the lagoon, Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota) and the Azorean spurge (Euphorbia azorica). The presence of estuary grasses (Ruppia maritima) within the lagoon is of great importance, since they were exceptional within the Azores (and only at this site). The fajã has a variety of typical marine flora and fauna, and its lagoon has become a natural refuge for diverse marine and migratory birds. Nesting birds include the Cory's shearwater (Calonectris diomedea borealis), common snipe (Gallinago gallinago), yellow-legged gull (Larus cachinnans atlantis) and the common tern (Sterna hirundo).
Scarce swallowtail butterfly (Iphiclides podalirius) on lavender flowers, near Adriatic coast The caterpillars of various swallowtail butterfly species feed on a wide range of different plants, most depending on only one of five families: Aristolochiaceae, Annonaceae, Lauraceae, Umbelliferae (Apiaceae) and Rutaceae. By eating some of these toxic plants, the caterpillars sequester aristolochic acid which renders both the caterpillars and the butterflies of some of these as toxic, thus protecting them from predators.. Similarly, the Parnassius smintheus sequesters sarmentosin from its host plant Sedum lanceolatum for protection from predators. Swallowtail tribes Zerynthiini (Parnassiinae), Luehdorfiini (Parnassiinae) and Troidini (Papilioninae), almost exclusively use the family Aristolochiaceae as their host plants. For example, the eastern black swallowtail's main host plant in the wild is Queen Anne's lace, but they also eat garden plants in the carrot family, including carrots, parsley, dill, and fennel.
After her husband's return from France, the Tolkiens' first child, John Francis Reuel (16 November 1917 – 22 January 2003) was born in Cheltenham. While Edith's husband was stationed at Kingston upon Hull, she and he went walking in the woods at nearby Roos, and Edith began to dance for him in a clearing among the flowering hemlock: > We walked in a wood where hemlock was growing, a sea of white > flowers.Following rural English usage, Tolkien used the name "hemlock" for > various plants with white flowers in umbels, resembling the poison hemlock; > the flowers among which Edith danced were more probably cow parsley > (Anthriscus sylvestris) or Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota). See John Garth > Tolkien and the Great War (Harper Collins/Houghton Mifflin 2003) and Peter > Gilliver, Jeremy Marshall, & Edmund Weiner The Ring of Words (OUP 2006).
Sidney is situated within the coastal Douglas fir ecosystem, one of the most restricted ecosystems in Canada, dominated by large Douglas firs, along with its most distinctive species, the Arbutus and Garry oak in drier exposures, and the aptly named big leaf maple, and western red cedar in damper sites. Deciduous trees include the black cottonwood, Douglas maple, red alder, Pacific dogwood, bitter cherry, Pacific crab apple, cascara, quaking aspen, hawthorn and several species of willow. Coastal areas contain several unique plant communities including sea asparagus, salt grass and eelgrass, documented by the renowned botanist and explorer, John Macoun, after he retired as curator of the National Museum in 1912. Many non-native plants also occur, including many invasive species such as English ivy, Scotch broom, laurel-leafed daphne, Himalayan blackberry, chicory, Queen Anne's lace, and red clover.

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