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Examples

  • It's publisher, Alder Yarrow, is one of the wine blogosphere's most thoughtful, talented people and this post from last week Subjectivity, Aesthetics, and the Evaluation of Wine is one that you should check out.

    Can (and Should) Wine Critics Eschew the Subjective? 2008

  • It's publisher, Alder Yarrow, is one of the wine blogosphere's most thoughtful, talented people and this post from last week Subjectivity, Aesthetics, and the Evaluation of Wine is one that you should check out.

    LENNDEVOURS: 2008

  • Finally, another view of the Yarrow, which is a flower I love even though I really hate the smell.

    Archive 2008-08-01 Kalyn Denny 2008

  • Finally, another view of the Yarrow, which is a flower I love even though I really hate the smell.

    Friday Night Photos: Flowers Blooming in My Front Yard Kalyn Denny 2008

  • Here again we are upon classic ground -- in the vale of the clear winding Devon, which more than any other stream recalls Yarrow with its hills green to the top and its pastoral melancholy.

    Chronicles of Strathearn John Hunter 1883

  • It's a common roadside weed called Yarrow (Achillea millefolium).

    BC Bloggers 2010

  • It was easy enough, without exciting suspicion, to run the sheep into the yards on a Saturday night, and thence to the vaults, and no one would ever see the work of altering the buists going on, for "Yarrow" sat outside, and always, by barking, gave timely notice of the approach of any undesirable person.

    Stories of the Border Marches Jeanie Lang

  • At last "Yarrow" seemed to realise that he was beaten, and that to persevere farther would be dangerous, and he left the ewes and started for home.

    Stories of the Border Marches Jeanie Lang

  • "Yarrow," was sent by night to collect the sheep which master and man had determined to steal, and to one so familiar with the hills this was no difficult task.

    Stories of the Border Marches Jeanie Lang

  • Therefore, when daylight began to appear, if the sheep had already been got well on their way towards Ormiston, Millar would leave "Yarrow" to finish the drive single-handed, a task which the dog always carried out most successfully if it could be done reasonably early, before people began to move abroad out of their houses.

    Stories of the Border Marches Jeanie Lang

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