cowslips in English

noun
1
a European primula with clusters of drooping fragrant yellow flowers in spring, growing on dry grassy banks and in pasture.
Banks of primroses, drifts of bluebells and clusters of cowslips are now found only in secret, out-of-the-way places.
2
any of a number of herbaceous plants, in particular.
A dewdrop fell from the petal of a lone cowslip growing by the garden wall.
noun

Use "cowslips" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "cowslips" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "cowslips", or refer to the context using the word "cowslips" in the English Dictionary.

1. Cowslips and Sole Reflexology, Matlock, UK

2. Cowslips are perennials with oblong leaves

3. Our Cowslips originate from Europe and Western Asia

4. Our Cowslips originate from Europe and Western Asia

5. Plants you could use include Cowslips, primroses, violets, ivy, …

6. Cockerels, cowslips and violets are disappearing from many people's lives.

7. Cowslips were gathered for making wine … We sucked nectar from the bottom of Cowslips in the belief that it would make us grow [St Albans, Hertfordshire

8. Cowslips are one of the first heralds of the spring

9. Cowslip Cockerels, Cowslips and violets are disappearing from many people's lives.

10. Cowslips can be purchased from your veterinarian or at your local farm merchant store

11. How to propagate Cowslips and primroses: Sow the seed thinly and evenly, and leave uncovered

12. ‘Primroses, Cowslips and swallows are everywhere and the softening in the weather is a sure sign that brighter and warmer days are near.’ ‘Mr Slaney said Cowslips and primroses have flourished and a pond has developed naturally and become a haven for wildlife.’

13. ‘Primroses, Cowslips and swallows are everywhere and the softening in the weather is a sure sign that brighter and warmer days are near.’ ‘Mr Slaney said Cowslips and primroses have flourished and a pond has developed naturally and become a haven for wildlife.’

14. Cowslips are often mistaken for Oxslips (Primula elatior), which is a hybrid between Cowslip and Primrose (Primula vulgaris)

15. Made from highly durable PVC, Cowslips are the original orthopaedic shoes for the treatment of lameness in cattle

16. Fitted to the healthy claw, Cowslips take the weight off the affected claw, thus alleviating pain and accelerating healing

17. In spite of his indifference, it was exquisite: the ditch banks were creamy with cowslips and lilac with cuckoo flower.

18. Cowslips® are orthopedic shoes fitted to the healthy claw of the affected hoof, removing weight from the diseased or injured claw

19. Cowslips have also been used by humans for many varied medicinal purposes over the centuries particularly to solve sleeping problems

20. In honor of Earth Day and springtime, Albrecht Dürer's Tuft of Cowslips is the inspiration for this interactive conversation

21. The place looked not unlike Jamie Oliver's current Sainsbury's advertisement, only these cowslips were in an unfaltering carpet and had been there for centuries.

22. Many Cowslips are grown as ornamental plants in gardens in many regions of the world, and some have been used historically in herbal medicine

23. Primula veris, family Primulaceae ‘Banks of primroses, drifts of bluebells and clusters of Cowslips are now found only in secret, out-of-the-way places.’

24. Whilst today was more about anticipation than actual Botanising, it was soon apparent that the field will be golden with cowslips in just a week or two

25. Aunt Bett looked at me for a long minute before she said: "Chile, Cowslips is a plant and it grows right here, that's them right there at your feet

26. 20 Some of the plants have obituary names: Iris, Basil, Rue, Rosemary, and Verbena. Some, like meadowsweet and cowslips, sweet flag and spikenard, are like the names of Shakespeare fairies.

27. All flowering plants, including Cowslips, red clover, yarrow and yellow vetchling, will be collected over a one-year period and provide a snapshot of the changes over 150 years

28. Plant of the week: Romans used meadow flower for love potions Milder weather later in the year saw many species recover, but also some unusually unseasonal sightings including Cowslips flowering in November."

29. Many nurseries carry Cowslips, for people who wish to cultivate them, and they can also be observed wild in many regions, although wild populations of some species are under threat due to habitat damage

30. Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528), Tuft of Cowslips or Primula (1526), gouache on vellum, w16.8 x h19.3 cm (overall), National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, The Armand Hammer Collection, Image source: Wikimedia Commons in public domain

31. I particularly love to see Cowslips which always remind me of a wonderful play William Shakespeare wrote, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and, in particular, that exquisite scene in the wood near Athens when Puck greets a fairy with the words:

32. The Cowslips tall her pensioners be; In their gold coats spots you see; Those be rubies, fairy favours, In those freckles live their savours: I must go seek some dew-drops here, And hang a pearl in every cowslip’s ear

33. Cowslips quotes from YourDictionary: Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies, The tufted crow-toe, and pale gessamine, The white pink, and the pansy freaked with jet, The glowing violet, The musk-rose, and the well attir'd woodbine, With co