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"waterer" Definitions
  1. one that waters: such as
  2. a person who obtains or supplies drinking water
  3. a device used for supplying water to livestock and poultry

19 Sentences With "waterer"

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

I also find a duck waterer on clearance that I hope will be less messy ($60).
At least he'd be able to login to his smart plant waterer and thermostat from down here and check in on the various web forums he moderates.
If you're an over-waterer, even in that tiny garden in back of your Brooklyn apartment building, that same tiny yard could be guzzling as much as 75,000 gallons of water per year.
Notable cultivars include 'Donald Waterer' and 'Superba'. The latter has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. It bears fragrant cream-coloured flowers, which age to yellow.
Robinson had the 50 acres laid out as a formal garden by noted landscape gardener Gomer Waterer. They sold the property to South African millionaire Philip Hill in 1942, and on his death passed to his wife, who became Mrs. Warwick Byant.
It is believed to be the oldest free newspaper in Britain. In 1924 Waterer's Park was left to Woking U.D.C. by Anthony Waterer of Knaphill Nursery. Knaphill Football Club started playing there. In 1945, a V-2 rocket launched by Germany landed on Woking.
He attended St John's College, Cambridge and then Lincoln's Inn. He was elected Member of Parliament for Grantham in the 1697 by-election, sitting until 1701. He then represented Lincolnshire until 1708, before representing Grantham between 1711 and 1715. He married Margaret (née Waterer), widow of Francis Coventry, in 1701 at Westminster Abbey.
Waterer, D.; Elsadr, H.; Mcarthur, M. L. (2011). “Skin Color, Scab Sensitivity and Field Performance of Lines Derived from Spontaneous Chimeras of Red Norland Potato”. American Journal of Potato Research 88: 199–206 None of these three varieties is under plant variety protection. The darker red strains are now widely grown, and 'Norland' is rarely grown.
After graduation, Oehme worked in the nursery of Waterer Sons & Crisp in Bagshot and then got a job with the city parks department in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. From 1956 he was employed by the Delius company in Nuremberg. Oehme, a great admirer of the works of Karl MayStefan Leppert: Ornamental Grasses. Wolfgang Oehme and the New American Garden.
It was bred in 1886 by Anthony Waterer, an early hybridizer (Paghat, 2008). Besides maintaining biodiversity, Rhododendron album is important for its aesthetic value. Rhododendron album, along with the many other variations and hybrids, are popular plants in the landscaping industry, and are used for a variety of decorations, including wedding and special occasion bouquets, corsages, and other floral arrangements.
The mines were previously known as Wheals Kitty, Margaret, Mary and Trencrom. There is a covering of bell heather (Erica cinerea) on the hill and in 1926 Miss Gertrude Waterer found a variety with a prostrate habit and lavender flowers. It was commercially introduced by Knap Hill Nursery's in 1933 and awarded a Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Merit in the same year and in 1984 a Garden Merit.
The club initially played at Waterer's Park, a site which had been gifted to Woking Urban District Council by Anthony Waterer in 1924. They played there until moving to Redding Way ground during the 2004–05 season, although reserve teams continued to play at Waterer's Park. Floodlights were erected in 2011 together with a 50-seat stand. Another 50-seat stand was added in March 2015 alongside a covered terrace with a capacity of 50.
There are numerous examples in cinema history of directors who based most of the humor in their films on visual gags, even to the point of using no or minimal dialogue. Visual gags began in live theater. The first known use of a visual gag in a film was in the Lumière brothers' 1895 short, L'Arroseur Arrosé ("The Waterer Watered"), in which a gardener watering his plants becomes the subject of a boy's prank. An early pioneer in visual gags was Georges Méliès.
The following is a list of a few pieces from the largest collections presented in the halls of the museum that are open to the public. Salle des gardiens: Furnished dwelling of the last caretakers from the Papeterie France 1939. Salle Bassereau: Weaving machines from 1630 to 1950. Salle Big Bull: Filtz tractor1919 - Big Bull tractor USA 1914 - Truck from Clintonville, Wis USA 1912. Salle Laffly: Panhard Levassor car1922 - Laffly road-sweeper and waterer 1911 - Le Zèbre car 1902 - Mac Cormick swather USA 1888 - Buick car USA 1950.
Clark purchased Windlesham Moor, a picturesque Surrey mansion in 50 acres of grounds on the edge of Windsor Forest, in 1921 and, like Robinson, never returned to Australia. :The mansion was built at the end of The Great War by Sir Byron Peters and run by Lady Peters as a convalescent hospital. Robinson and the 50 acres laid out as a formal garden by noted landscape gardener Gomer Waterer. They sold the property to South African millionaire Philip Hill in 1942, and on his death passed to his wife, who became Mrs.
It was later passed it to a member of the Jackman family, who in the early 19th century passed it onto Robert Donald and it then became known as Goldsworth Nursery. In the 1830s it was passed to a partnership consisting of William Chandler, Charles Waterer and George Jackman. 1877 saw the partnership selling to Walter Charles Slocock who, in time, expands the nursery by buying land to the north. Goldsworth (Langmans) Bridge was built in 1790; it is a brick bridge over the Basingstoke Canal and is now listed as a National Scheduled Ancient Monument.
L'Arroseur Arrosé (; also known as The Waterer Watered and The Sprinkler Sprinkled) is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent comedy film directed and produced by Louis Lumière and starring François Clerc and Benoît Duval. It was first screened on June 10, 1895. It is the earliest known instance of film comedy, the first use of film to portray a fictional story, and the first use of a promotional film poster. The film was originally known as Le Jardinier ("The Gardener") or Le Jardinier et le petit espiègle, and is sometimes referred to in English as The Tables Turned on the Gardener, and The Sprinkler Sprinkled.
Unfortunately, the second beech tree has recently died, and was taken down in February 2006. However, the “Fairhaven Beech” will live on: seedlings were collected from the tree from 2000-2005. Massive purchases of rhododendrons were made in England, Japanese crabapples and cherries, and forest and specimen trees, lindens, Scotch and red pines, oaks. Through the English nurseryman Glomar Waterer, who had sold Mr Coe the rhododendrons, came an offer in 1916 of an unusually fine collection of camellias located in Guernsey, for which the Camellia House was constructed by "Bobo" Sargent in autumn 1917, and filled with the plants grown in tubs that were shipped the following spring.
A four had considerable success at local regattas in the late 1890s, and these came more and more often as the club developed. 1900–present The first big victory for the club came in 1924, where the crew of; R.G. Jackson(b), H.G.E. Woods, J.G. Barley, H.J. Fowlie, S.A. Quarterman, R.R. Waterer, W. Boulton, J.H. Waizeneker(s), A.E. Grenn (c), coached by Capt. H. Booth-Mason won the Thames Challenge Cup at Henley, after a similar crew lost in the final of the same event in 1923. A similar crew then raced the Grand Challenge Cup in 1925, and lost out to London Rowing Club by a mere 5 feet. The success in 1924 prompted for the club to extend its premises.

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