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Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
"I cannot have this," and her expression was the same as when she tore at the nut grass.
The prickly nut grass crawling across the ground there was yellowed.
"Why, one sprig of nut grass can ruin a whole yard.
She worked at the weeds and nut grass as if they were an evil sent directly by the devil to destroy the place.
Mrs. Cope was bent over, digging fiercely at the nut grass again.
Her Negroes were as destructive and impersonal as the nut grass.
Nut grass, (Cyperus rotundus) sometimes known as "the world's worst weed"
The apartments were arranged in tiers around a courtyard "garden" of loose gravel, pink paving stones, and nut grass.
"Well, well," Mrs. Cope muttered and threw a large clump of nut grass behind her.
They flourished in the swampy, jungle like lowlands of Parris Island, where palmettoes and nut grass grew in abundance.
Considering crab grass, nut grass, chickweed, ragweed and all the other vegetative menaces that keep us busy in the growing season, the hesitation about deliberately planting something called a weed is understandable.
The names "nut grass" and "nut sedge" (shared with the related species Cyperus esculentus) are derived from its tubers, that somewhat resemble nuts, although botanically they have nothing to do with nuts.
Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
A reader from Decatur, Ga. writes that "In the Southeast, the use of dairy and horse manures is not recommended in gardens since these manures contain an invasive weed seed (nut grass) that is not killed by composting.
Yellow nutsedge - perennial
Cyperus esculentus L. - Yellow nutsedge [Wo]
Purple nutsedge (C. rotundus) is another weedy sedge that is similar to the yellow nutsedge (C. esculentus).
Diploschizia impigritella, known commonly as the Yellow nutsedge moth or the Five-barred glyphipterid moth, is a species of sedge moths in the genus Diploschizia.
Cyperus esculentus - Chufa Flatsedge, Tigernut Sedge, Yellow Nutsedge, Yellow Nutgrass, Yellow Umbrella-sedge, Earthalmond
Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
Cyperus esculentus - Chufa Flatsedge, Tigernut Sedge, Yellow Nutsedge, Yellow Nutgrass, Yellow Umbrella-sedge, Earthalmond
Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
The larvae feed on Cyperus esculentus.
Tiger nut (Cyperus esculentus) was used to make a dessert made from the dried and ground tubers mixed with honey.
Cyperus esculentus var.
sativus - Asia, cultivated origin The most important cultivated species is Cyperus esculentus var.
Cyperus esculentus L. - Yellow nutsedge [Wo]
Particularly important plant foods are Oxalis and other bulbs as well as sedge (Cyperus esculentus and C. sphaerolepis) tubers, which it digs up.
Horchata, in Mexico made of rice scented with vanilla, also of walnuts, barley, or chufa (the root of Cyperus esculentus), rarely of oats
Eupatorium adoratum, Achyranthes aspera, Cyperus esculentus, Phragmites karka, Vitex trifolia, Accium basilium, Saccharum spontaneum and Imperata arundinacea.
The Northern Paiute community thrived upon a subsistence pattern of foraging and augmenting their diets with fish, pine nuts, wild game, and foraging for roots such as Cyperus esculentus.
In chufa (tiger nut, Cyperus esculentus) and sugar beet the predominant diferulic acids are 8-O-4'-DiFA and 8,5'-DiFA respectively.
Cyperus esculentus - Chufa Flatsedge, Tigernut Sedge, Yellow Nutsedge, Yellow Nutgrass, Yellow Umbrella-sedge, Earthalmond
The names "nut grass" and "nut sedge" (shared with the related species Cyperus esculentus) are derived from its tubers, that somewhat resemble nuts, although botanically they have nothing to do with nuts.
Alboraya is known as "the cradle of horchata" and "the spring of horchata" because of its cultivation and processing of Cyperus esculentus, commonly known as sedge hazelnut or tigernut.
Cyperus esculentus (or chufa sedge, nut grass, yellow nutsedge, tigernut sedge, or earth almond) is a crop of the family sedge native to warm temperate to subtropical regions of the Northern Hemisphere.
Cyperus esculentus The Northern Paiutes living in Mason Valley, in what is now the U.S. state of Nevada, were known collectively as the Tövusi-dökadö (Tövusi-: "Cyperus bulb" and dökadö: "eaters") at the time of European-American settlement.