Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The middle row is home to Black Pearl peppers, Antohi pepper, Aruba pepper, overflow Heleniums and Inula magnifica.
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Also present, but threatened with extinction due to their medicinal and ornamental value, are six Chinese endemics and three other species, including Orobonche coerulescens, Inula iinariaefolia, Tillium tsochonoskii, Dendrobium nobile and Captis chinensis.
Mount Huangshan Scenic Beauty and Historic Interest Site, China 2008
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Inula macrophylla, Crambe kotschyana, Paraligusticum discolor.
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A rich, unique herb flora of Anemone begoniifolia, Gentiana cephalantha, Gerbera piloselloides, Inula cappa, Lilium bakerianum, L. ochraceum, Primula denticulata, and Senecio densiflora grows in these open forests, considered a fire-maintained preclimax community.
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In classic times the poet Horace told how Fundanius first taught the making of a delicate sauce, by boiling in it the bitter _Inula_
Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure William Thomas Fernie
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A spurious Samphire, the _Inula crithmoides_, or Golden Samphire, is often supplied in lieu of the real plant, though it has a different flavour, and few of the proper virtues.
Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure William Thomas Fernie
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The glandular-leaved Inula (I. glandulosa), of which a good representation is here given, is a beautiful hardy perennial.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 433, April 19, 1884 Various
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Then there is the woolly Inula (I. candida), a pretty plant with small oval leaves, covered with a thick, silky down, and much in the way of the white-leaved I. limonifolia, both of which are very effective when grown in masses, which should always be low down near the front of a rockery, or as an edging for a mixed border.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 433, April 19, 1884 Various
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Of the fifty-six species of Inula described in scientific works, probably not more than thirty are at present in cultivation in this country, and those are chiefly confined to botanic gardens, notwithstanding the fact that many of them are useful garden plants.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 433, April 19, 1884 Various
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One plant which grows here, the Willow-leaved Inula (_I. salicina_), is found nowhere else in the
The Sunny Side of Ireland How to see it by the Great Southern and Western Railway Robert Lloyd Praeger 1909
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