Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Alternative form of
spirea .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Mix in old-fashioned favorites such as spiraea and hydrangea to create an enviable cottage garden.
unknown title 2009
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Mix in old-fashioned favorites such as spiraea and hydrangea to create an enviable cottage garden.
unknown title 2009
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Mix in old-fashioned favorites such as spiraea and hydrangea to create an enviable cottage garden.
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Mix in old-fashioned favorites such as spiraea and hydrangea to create an enviable cottage garden.
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Many of these plants are repeated in her own yard such as coral bells (heuchera), Thunberg spiraea (Spirea thunbergii 'Ogon') and "Knock Out" roses.
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All the front rooms and dining rooms have been knocked into one through-room and the garden revealed has gum trees and spiraea and fremontodendrons—for this is twenty-first-century Britain where everyone has luxury and no one has any money.
Portobello Ruth Rendell 2010
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That leaves the spiraea and hellebores at the edges and top and the stipa and heuchera at the corner.
Dealing With The Daylily Hill-It Is Imperative « Fairegarden 2009
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There are daffodil, grape hyacinth and lily bulbs in there to start the show in early spring, magic carpet spiraea for three seasons of colorful foliage, hellebores, tall garden phlox and the sedums.
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It was a very small specimen when planted, that actually may have helped protect it, and the heaths and spiraea surrouding the trunk too.
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The weigela, forsythia, and spiraea are also excellent shrubs.
Ontario Teachers' Manuals: Household Science in Rural Schools Ontario. Ministry of Education
knitandpurl commented on the word spiraea
also, meadowsweet
March 2, 2010
knitandpurl commented on the word spiraea
"When spring came, Lewis was surprised to see that the hedge in front of the Hanchett house was wildly overgrown. It was a spiraea hedge, and had always had bristly little pink-and-white blossoms. This spring there were no blossoms on the hedge; it had turned into a dark, thorny thicket that completely hid the first floor windows and sent long waving tendrils up to scrape at the zinc gutter troughs. Burdocks and ailanthus trees had grown up overnight near the house; their branches screened the second-story windows."
The House with a Clock in Its Walls, by John Bellairs, p 122 of the Puffin Books paperback edition
March 2, 2010