Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
I'm sitting by the fire smoking some wild tobacco, nothing like this stuff, when Dalamar puts on them glasses.
The name Mdloti is the Zulu word for a species of wild tobacco that grows here.
Nicotiana quadrivalvis is a species of wild tobacco known by the common name Indian tobacco.
There were samples of buckthorn, acorns, ocotillo, nightshade and wild tobacco.
Quite a few plants grow there; much of the visible vegetation is the exotic wild tobacco, Nicotiana glauca.
Wild tobacco, is native to the southwestern United States, Mexico, and parts of South America.
He counted grapevines, chickweed, milkweed, dandelions, ferns, mustard, laurel and wild tobacco among his tenants.
The plant is also used by the Huichol, mixed with Nicotiana rustica (a potent wild tobacco), for its claimed psychotropic and entheogenic effects.
The girl stooped to pick a large leaf of wild tobacco, and laid it lightly over Selver's eyes, on which a shaft of the steepening, bright sunlight had fallen.
The Little Wattlebird is found in Banksia/Eucalypt woodlands, heathlands, tea-tree scrub, sandplain-heaths, lantana thickets, wild tobacco, parks and gardens.
In Australia this plant is known colloquially as "wild tobacco", although Australia possesses many species of Nicotiana which are more correctly known as wild tobaccos.
(SWEET ORANGE) WILD THYME Wild Tobacco.
Asthma Weed, Bladderpod, Emetic Herb, Gagroot, Indian Tobacco, Lobelia inflata, Lobelie, Pukeweed, Vomit Wort, Wild Tobacco.
Its common names include Woolly Nightshade, Ear-leaved Nightshade (or "earleaf nightshade"), Flannel Weed, Bugweed, Tobacco Weed, Tobacco Bush, Wild Tobacco and Kerosene Plant.
In some ways, "Soul of Nowhere" looks like a boys' book, with Childs and various companions hunting rabbits with a slingshot, hanging out in remote caves, smoking cigarettes rolled out of wild tobacco and engaging in other Huck-and-Tom adventures.
The sacred pipe is used for the smoking of tobacco (Nicotiana rustica) in ritual ceremonies.
Its botanical name is Nicotiana rustica.
Also, a tobacco that contains higher nicotine content, and therefore smaller doses required, called Nicotiana rustica was commonly used.
Nicotiana rustica (I)
To facilitate control of tsentsak they must be nourished by the consumption of mapacho (Nicotiana rustica), which can be smoked or imbibed as an infusion.
The tobacco used during these rituals varies widely in potency-the Nicotiana rustica species used in South America, for instance, has up to twice the nicotine content of the common North American N. tabacum.
Brews can also be made with no DMT-containing plants; Psychotria viridis being substituted by plants such as Justicia pectoralis, Brugmansia, or sacred tobacco, also known as Mapacho (Nicotiana rustica), or sometimes left out with no replacement.