marsh marigold in Czech

blatouch bahenní Entry edited by: B2

Sentence patterns related to "marsh marigold"

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1. Similar species: Lesser Celandine resembles marsh marigold (Caltha palustris) but is much smaller

2. Marsh marigold contains 5-9 yellow "petals" (actually sepals), while lesser Celandine often contains 8 petals

3. Caltha palustris, the marsh marigold her in its single and double-flowered forms, brings sunny colour to the bog garden.

4. A year later, plants such as woolgrass Bulrush, brome hummock sedge, giant bur-reed, marsh marigold, queen-of-the-prairie and spike gayfeather are attracting dragonflies and monarch butterflies.

5. I think this is an Alpine Avens flower (Acomastylis rossii ssp turbinatum) Dwarf Clover (Trifolium nanum), and some Alpine Avens That is a Stealthy Ground Spider, Cesonia Bilineate, on a Marsh Marigold Flower, Caltha leptosepala.

6. The marsh marigold or Caltha palustris is another plant native to the Northern Hemisphere which is sometimes known as a Cowslip. The common name “Cowslip” is used in reference to a number of herbaceous plants found primarily in the Northern Hemisphere.

7. Primula veris, a flowering plant commonly known as Cowslip; Primula deorum, a flowering plant known as God's Cowslip and rila Cowslip; Primula florindae, a flowering plant known as giant Cowslip and Tibetan Cowslip; Primula sikkimensis, a flowering plant known as Himalayan Cowslip and Sikkim Cowslip; Caltha palustris, a flowering plant known as marsh marigold

8. The American wild flower most commonly called Cowslip is the marsh marigold, which is really neither a Cowslip nor a fanfold, but belongs to the crowfoot family, In their homesickness the first English colonists, when they saw its golden flowers, gave it the name of the fragrant yellow Cowslip that dots English meadows in early spring.