The Journal of a Naturalist ...Carey & Lea, 1831 - 286 sider |
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Side v
... potato - sorts - expense and profit - effect upon the soil - not considered as injurious - sketch of its history - its introduc- tion - some soils not favorable for the root - introduced later than tobacco -value to mankind - Ignorance ...
... potato - sorts - expense and profit - effect upon the soil - not considered as injurious - sketch of its history - its introduc- tion - some soils not favorable for the root - introduced later than tobacco -value to mankind - Ignorance ...
Side 12
... potato land . The return in general is not so large as when grown in manure from the yard ; but the root is said to be more mealy , and better flavored . The utility of lime as manure consists in loosening the tenacious nature of some ...
... potato land . The return in general is not so large as when grown in manure from the yard ; but the root is said to be more mealy , and better flavored . The utility of lime as manure consists in loosening the tenacious nature of some ...
Side 18
... potato - setting ; nor is this finished wholly before haymaking com- mences . Teaseling succeeds ; the corn harvest comes on , followed shortly by the requirements of the potato again , and the digging out and securing this requires the ...
... potato - setting ; nor is this finished wholly before haymaking com- mences . Teaseling succeeds ; the corn harvest comes on , followed shortly by the requirements of the potato again , and the digging out and securing this requires the ...
Side 23
... potatoes ; the requisite hackings , hoeings , and diggings of which alone were sufficient to eradicate any original fibrous , rooted herbage . This field was laid down with clean ray grass ( lolium perenne ) , white trefoil , and hop ...
... potatoes ; the requisite hackings , hoeings , and diggings of which alone were sufficient to eradicate any original fibrous , rooted herbage . This field was laid down with clean ray grass ( lolium perenne ) , white trefoil , and hop ...
Side 26
... potato exten- sively in our fields , a root which must be considered , after bread - corn and rice , the kindest vegetable gift of Providence to mankind . This root forms the chief support of our population as their food , and affords ...
... potato exten- sively in our fields , a root which must be considered , after bread - corn and rice , the kindest vegetable gift of Providence to mankind . This root forms the chief support of our population as their food , and affords ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
admiration afford agaric animal appears ash tree autumn beautiful become birds blackcap blossom brood captured cause chaffinch color common common shrew commonly copse creatures crop cultivation decay delight dyer's broom early earth effect eggs feeding field fieldfare flight flowers foliage frequently frost fruit fungi gamboge garden ghost moth grass ground HARVEST MOUSE hedge herbage injury insects labor land larvæ leaf leaves lichens manifest moisture mole moth nature nest notice numbers nutriment object observed obtain occasionally occasioned pastures peculiar perfectly perhaps period phallus pileus places plant plunder portion potato prey probably produce quadrupeds race remain render retire rook root season seeds seems soil species sphæria sprays spring substance summer supply teasel things thrush tion tree ture variety vegetable verdure vols weather white-thorn wild wings winter wood worms wych elm YELLOW WAGTAIL young
Populære avsnitt
Side 160 - And the fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth, and upon every fowl of the air, upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the sea; into your hand are they delivered.
Side 7 - A COLLECTION OF COLLOQUIAL PHRASES, ON EVERY TOPIC NECESSARY TO MAINTAIN CONVERSATION, Arranged under different heads, with numerous remarks on the peculiar pronunciation and...
Side 57 - O ! who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus? Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast?
Side 290 - Arts, the work will be exceedingly rich. Great attention was given to this in the German work, and the Editors have been anxious to render it, by the necessary additions, as perfect as possible. To gentlemen of the Bar, the work will be peculiarly valuable, as in cases where legal subjects are treated, an account is given of the provisions of Anieri-, can, English, French, Prussian, Austrian, and Civil Law.
Side 129 - ... as it is appointed the earliest of risers, it would commonly be famished. In the hot summer of 1825, many of the young brood of the season perished from want; the mornings were without dew, and consequently few or no worms were to be obtained ; and we found them dead under the trees, having expired on their roostings. It was particularly distressing, for no relief could be- given, to hear the constant clamor and importunity of the young for food.
Side 147 - We observed this summer two common thrushes frequenting the shrubs on the green in our garden. From the slenderness of their forms, and the freshness of their plumage, we pronounced them to be birds of the preceding summer. There was an association and friendship between them that called our attention to their actions ; one of them seemed ailing or feeble from some bodily accident, for, though it hopped about, yet it appeared unable to obtain a sufficiency of food.
Side 31 - And he spake of trees, from the cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop that springeth out of the wall: he spake also of beasts, and of fowl, and of creeping things, and of fishes.
Side 291 - The variety of topics is of course vast, and they are treated in a manner which is at once so full of information and so interesting, that the work, instead of being merely referred to, might be regularly perused with as much pleasure as profit.