Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Some species are commonly known as false goat's beard, and false spirea.
Astilbe, some species of which are known as "False Goat's Beard"
Unlike horses, they have cloven hooves, and males have a goat's beard.
Large round spectacles and a small projecting goat's beard combined with his stooping attitude to give him an expression of peering curiosity.
Goatsbeard or Goat's beard may refer to:
Tragos is Greek for a male goat, and refers to the tuft of hair that grows in the eland's ear which resembles a goat's beard.
There are goat's beard and sweet woodruff, wood asters and a fine assortment of hostas, none of which need mowing.
(goat's beard or bride's feathers) is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant in the family Rosaceae, and is the type species of the genus Aruncus.
With noodle soup in his goat's beard and fury in his pig eyes, Harum Scarum rushed at Peter.
'The field marigold is open, the red sandwort is opening, the purple bindweed is closed, and the yellow goat's beard is closing,' said Lobsang.
Mr. Stamats has planted the place to resemble a natural woodland glade with shade-loving hostas, goat's beard, rodgersia, angelica, epimedium and foam flower.
Among the perennial plants that perform a dual role to perfection is the goat's beard, Aruncus dioicus, a 4ft-6ft tall perennial of which I am especially fond.
Goatfish are tireless benthic feeders, possess a pair of long chemosensory barbels ("whiskers") protruding from their chins resembling a goat's beard.
His chest was hairy and muscular, his face a triangular shape that was accentuated by the tuft of a goat's beard that dangled from his chin.
Its name comes from the Greek: tragos, goat, and is descriptive of its general covering on its under surface with a tuft of hair, resembling a goat's beard.
As I came back to Professor Summerlee, he was having a furious altercation with the men who had carried down the oxygen, his little white goat's beard jerking with indignation.
Other common names are False Goat's Beard, Appleberry, Sorb-leaved Schizonotus, and Ural False Spirea.
The unicorn is a legendary animal from European folklore that resembles a white horse with a large, pointed, spiraling horn projecting from its forehead, and sometimes a goat's beard and cloven hooves.
Though the character is Italian, characteristics such as Stromboli's facial expressions, obsession with wealth, and long black 'goat's beard' have led some to make comparisons with Jewish stereotypes (particularly Hollywood moguls).
In particular the national parks is known for its population of Unicorn, a Equine with a large, pointed, spiraling horn projecting from its forehead, and sometimes a goat's beard and cloven hooves.
Some of the more common species of 'Tragopogon' are known, in the regions where they are most common, by the common names goat's beard, goatsbeard, salsify, or common salsify, without further qualification.
A lot of scrub, of course, goat's beard, devil's club, teaberry, huckleberry and bilberry, but all through it there was hemlock, cedar and fir that just had to be worth something whatever the problems of getting it out.'
There was no big timber anywhere, everything felled and only the scrub of new growth - birch and mountain ash and alder, goat's beard, devil's club, and beside the track a trailing evergreen that Brian said was kinnikinick.
Clematis aristata, known as Australian Clematis, Wild clematis, Goat's beard or Old man's beard, is a climbing shrub of the Ranunculaceae family, found in eastern Australia in dry and wet forests of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.
They include Western Goat's Beard, Wild Oysterplant, Yellow Salsify, Yellow Goat's Beard, Meadow Goat's Beard, Goat's Beard, Goatsbeard, Common Salsify, or Salsify.
(goat's beard or bride's feathers) is a flowering herbaceous perennial plant in the family Rosaceae, and is the type species of the genus Aruncus.
Aruncus dioicus (I)
Aruncus dioicus (goatsbeard) occurs throughout the cooler parts of Europe, Asia and North America.
Goatsbeard (Aruncus dioicus) is a shrub-like herbaceous perennial and a tough one at that, surviving winter temperatures well below freezing.
Among the perennial plants that perform a dual role to perfection is the goat's beard, Aruncus dioicus, a 4ft-6ft tall perennial of which I am especially fond.