panicles in English

noun
1
a loose, branching cluster of flowers, as in oats.
It is a shrub or small tree with simple, alternate, unlobed leaves, panicles of white flowers in the spring, and bright blue drupes in the late summer and early fall.

Use "panicles" in a sentence

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

1. Spanish grass with light feathery panicles grown for dried bouquets.

2. The flowers are Apetalous (flowers having no petals) and unisexual and borne in panicles

3. With its loose, billowy panicles of tiny, ruffled flowers, baby's breath provides a lightness and Airiness to floral projects

4. Cordifolium, 4 ft., has large Cordate leaves, and heads of rich orange flowers in cymose panicles in July

5. The flowers are solitary or aggregated in cymes, spikes, or panicles and typically perfect (bisexual) and actinomorphic.

6. Bellflowers produce purple, blue, white, or occasionally pink flowers held in small panicles, each with a five-lobed corolla

7. Harvest needs to be precisely timed to avoid high seed losses from shattering, and different panicles on the same plant mature at different times.

8. What does Brome mean? Any of various grasses of the genus Bromus, having loose usually drooping panicles and including several weeds and orna

9. 22 It is presumed that chlamydospore may be the major primary infection source of rice false smut and begin to infect the panicles of rice before or after florescence.

10. Definition of Broomcorn : any of several tall cultivated sorghums having stiff-branched panicles used in brooms and brushes Examples of Broomcorn in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web Commercial Broomcorn …

11. By means of allometry it was possible to distinguish six different growth phases: early development (I), sprouting (II), appearance of panicles (III), flowering (IV), ear development (V), and ripening (VI).

12. It is presumed that chlamydospore may be the major primary infection source of rice false smut and begin to infect the panicles of rice before or after florescence.

13. Acacias are showy and lushly flowering with Lilliputian flowers, composed of four or five tiny petals and massed stamens forming globular, fluffy, sweetly scented balls, racemes or panicles in winter or spring.

14. Astilbe definition is - any of a genus (Astilbe) of chiefly Asian perennials of the saxifrage family that have simple or usually compound leaves and are widely cultivated for their panicles of usually white, pink, or red flowers.

15. Agave definition is - any of a genus (Agave of the family Agavaceae, the Agave family) of plants having spiny-margined leaves and flowers in tall spreading panicles and including some cultivated for their fiber or sap or for ornament.

16. Ailanthus definition is - any of a small Asian genus (Ailanthus of the family Simaroubaceae, the Ailanthus family) of chiefly tropical trees and shrubs with bitter bark, pinnate leaves, and terminal panicles of ill-scented greenish flowers; especially : tree of heaven.

17. Astilbe chinensis, commonly called Chinese Astilbe, is clump-forming perennials which feature graceful, fern-like mounds of mostly basal, 2-3 ternately compound leaves, usually with sharply-toothed leaflets, and tiny flowers densely packed into erect to arching, plume-like flower panicles rising above the foliage on slender, upright stems.

18. Boltonia Asteroides, commonly called false chamomile or false aster, is a rhizomatous perennial which typically grows to 5-6’ tall on erect, usually branching stems clad with alternate, linear, lance-shaped, stalkless, gray-green leaves (to 5” long).Tiny, daisy-like flowers (to 3/4” diameter) in loose panicles typically cover this aster-like plant with a

19. Up to 1 m high, aromatic, silky hirsuite, shrubby plant; basal leaves two to three times pinnatipartite with lanceolar cusps; yellow capitulae, 2-4 mm wide and arranged like panicles; perennial; anemogamous; flowering season VII - IX; old medicinal plant employed in a variety of ways with a strongly bitter taste; contains ethereal oils, including the poisonous Thujon; once used to make absinth liquor; this however has not been allowed since 1923 because of the systematic side effects.