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I have nO idea what or where lavender water is.
In her left hand she held a piece of lavender paper with writing on it.
His lavender eyes were wild when I turned to look at him.
At the turn of the century, lavender oil started being produced.
He was so close she could smell the oil of lavender in his hair.
The lavender dress had been no protection against the cold.
Like cut flowers, fresh lavender is best kept in water.
Or it might have been the smell of lavender water.
The place smelled of lavender and the potential for death.
A lavender light poured through them from the room beyond.
The Lavender family paid about $7,000 for the integrated system.
Suddenly a lavender sweater moved into my field of view.
He stood looking after her, as the lavender seller had done.
Most of the membership are just a little bit lavender, know what I mean?
The one on top with purple hair, that was Lavender.
There is no information available regarding the use of lavender by children.
There isn't enough information available to know how lavender cotton might work.
Lavender also survived a heart attack in the summer of 2004.
This area was once famous as "the lavender capital of the world".
It is also known as a deep shade of lavender.
The name comes from the flower of the lavender plant.
He noticed that the sky in the east was beginning to turn lavender.
She looked up at him with her trusting lavender eyes.
But the sky went lavender, and the sun was ginger.
Lavender was in the row behind her, feeling a bit guilty.
Subgenus Lavandula is mainly of woody shrubs with entire leaves.
Lavender, Lavandula; a pretty herb that produces beautiful scented flowers during the summer months.
Lavender is a genus of flowering plants, especially the species Lavandula angustifolia.
The genus name Lavandula simply means lavender.
Its Latin and scientific name is Lavandula.
Lavender, Lavandula; a familiar garden favourite, producing white, pink, blue or purple aromatic flowers during the summer months.
Chaytor D A. A taxonomic study of the genus Lavandula.
The genus, Lavandula, contains 28 species, including L. angustifolia, commonly known as English lavender.
Comparison of Lavandula angustifolia Mill.
A Lavandula x intermedias lavandin.
The relevance of this in vitro toxicity to dermatological application of Lavandula oils remains unclear."
The larvae feed on Teucrium chamaedrys, Salvia and Lavandula stoechas.
More recently work has been done by Upson and Andrews, and currently Lavandula is considered to have three subgenera.
The botanic name Lavandula as used by Linnaeus is considered to be derived from this and other European vernacular names for the plants.
Hybrids between L. angustifolia and L. latifolia are called Lavandula x intermedia.
Upson and Andrews; The Genus Lavandula.
The larvae possibly feed on Lavandula abrotanoides and Lavandula multifida.
The most common form in cultivation is the common or English lavender Lavandula angustifolia (formerly named L. officinalis).
The larvae feed on Quercus suber, Thymus Buxus sempervirens and Lavandula species.
The lavandins Lavandula x intermedia are a class of hybrids of L. angustifolia and L. latifolia.
Lavender (genus Lavandula) was also known by the ancient Greeks as nardos, nard, after the Sanskrit 'narada', or 'nalada'.
Both leaf and flower fascicles occur among Angiospermae, often as adaptations facilitating pollination, such as in many Lamiaceae, of which some Lavandula are typical.
The larvae feed on the flowers of various Lamiaceae species, including Coleus, Salvia, Calamintha and Lavandula species.
The larvae feed on various Lamiaceae species, including Lavandula stoechas, Thymus vulgaris and Thymus algeriensis numidicus.
They mainly feed on the leaves of many aromatic Lamiaceae species (Lavandula, Mentha, Origanum, Salvia, Thymus, etc.) and have one generation per year.