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She could not have been more than eighteen years old, golden as a kingcup and white as windflowers.
Too much weight's what Kingcup says.
Picking a kingcup, he placed it gently between the mousemaid's folded paws.
"So we appointed Kingcup.
The first chiff-chaff had shown up exceptionally early in 1970, he saw; the last kingcup had been seen in 1967.
You and the captain here, and Zoril, and Kingcup, and all the rest."
Poetry collections of this time were Lyrics to Kingcup (1932), Mishka and Madeleine.
Blackthorn blossom, gold of cowslip and kingcup, and blue of periwinkle and speedwell do not atone for unclothed branches.
At the subalpine level, the humid prairies are mainly composed of mats of Globe-flower, kingcup and twoflower violet.
Apples baked in honey with dollops of yellow kingcup cream topped the whole thing off, with a wide, flat, sugared plumcake standing by as an extra.
These include marsh marigold and kingcup (the two most frequently used common names), mayflower, May blobs, mollyblobs, pollyblobs, horse blob, water blobs, water bubbles, gollins.
"Then I'd remember that Wool was dead, and think where were the ones who rode with me, where was Kingcup who brought us her horses when her horses were all she had?
Out to the west, the great plains stretched away, shimmering and dancing with heat waves to the distant horizon, a breathtaking carpet of kingcup and dandelion mingled with cowslip; never had we ever seen so many yellow blossoms.
The British destroyer HMS Veteran arrived an hour later at 07:50 and picked up the 84 survivors, who were transferred to the Flower class corvette HMS Kingcup and landed at Derry.
To her left, Kingcup flailed a leggy bay with a long brown whip, Yapok bellowing obscenities, Kingcup shrieking curses, a nightmare witch, her loosed black hair streaming behind her.
Grasshoppers chirruped their ceaseless dry cadence; somewhere high in the cloudless blue a skylark trilled; bees droned busily from kingcup to meadow saffron, and butterflies perched upon scabious flowers, their wings like small, still sails on the calm air.
In North America Caltha palustris is sometimes known as cowslip.
Caltha palustris is a plant commonly mentioned in literature, including Shakespeare:
She found more than 50 for the marsh marigold; scientific nomenclature permits only one, Caltha palustris.
Caltha palustris is a highly polymorphic species, showing continuous and independent variation in many features.
Most usual explanation is that it derived from word balakh, which means caltha palustris plant.
Caltha palustris var.
In the wetter areas Rushes and Marsh marigold (Caltha palustris) are found.
Caltha palustris (marsh marigold)
Important orchid sites are reported on dry grassland, and marsh marigold (Caltha palustris) on wetland.
An unusual feature of the ground flora is the abundance of Marsh-marigold (Caltha palustris).
In the UK, Caltha palustris is known by a variety of common names, varying by geographical region.
Caltha palustris, the marsh marigold her in its single and double-flowered forms, brings sunny colour to the bog garden.
Cynosurus cristatus - Caltha palustris flood pasture.
Forms in the UK may be divided into two subspecies: Caltha palustris subsp.
Marsh Marigold (Caltha palustris)
Specific species include Belamcanda chinensis, Caltha palustris var.
Caltha palustris 'Yellow Giant'
Richard Mabey, in Flora Britannica, describes Caltha palustris thus:
Caltha palustris 'Semiplena' (double flowered)
The larvae feed on Myrica gale, Lysimachia vulgaris and Caltha palustris.
Caltha palustris (awarded the RHS's Award of Garden Merit)
In a swampy area it was noted to grow with Sphenopholis pensylvanica, Caltha palustris, and Viola conspersa.
In Latvia Caltha palustris is also known as Gundega which is also used as a girls name which symbolizes fire.
Surrounding meadowlands and ditches support other species, including, for example, ragged robin Lychnis flos-cuculi, marsh marigold Caltha palustris.
Marsh Marigold Caltha palustris L. grows here, and there is a fairly large bed of Great Reed-mace Typha latifolia L.