Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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So interesting to see your Ox-eye daisies blooming.
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Ox-eye daisies blooming in the roadside ditches, orange hawkweed joining the yellow, lupines nearing full bloom.
Not technically raining jhetley 2006
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= = Chrysanthemum leucanthemum = = (Marguerite, or Ox-eye Daisy).
The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition Sutton and Sons
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Ox-eye Daisy (= C. leucanthemum =), of which several new varieties have been introduced in recent years.
The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots 16th Edition Sutton and Sons
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Flowers from the centre of the stem, 3 in. long, and about the same in width; the petals regular and spreading, as in the Ox-eye daisy; stamens numerous, short, forming a disk; colour carmine, almost purple just before fading.
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Ox-eye daisies, hollyhocks and forget-me-nots clustered about the open windows.
The Sorcery Club Elliott O'Donnell 1918
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Ox-eye Daisy, Black-eyed Susan, Wild Carrot, and the most beautiful fall flower of the northeastern United States, the Fringed Gentian; in the woods, Mountain Laurel, Pink Azalea, a number of wild Orchids,
Scouting For Girls, Official Handbook of the Girl Scouts Girl Scouts of the United States of America 1918
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Daisy is different and much bigger, so we have got into the way of calling it "Ox-eye."
Woodland Tales Ernest Thompson Seton 1903
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City, N. J., for reading with critical care those parts of the manuscript that deal with flowers and insects, as well as for the ballad of the Ox-eye, the story of its coming to America, and the photograph of the Mecha-meck.
Woodland Tales Ernest Thompson Seton 1903
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In speaking of the Daisy, I mean to confine myself to the Daisy, commonly so-called, merely reminding you that there are also the Great or Ox-eye, or Moon Daisy (_Chrysanthemum leucanthemum_), the Michaelmas Daisy
The plant-lore & garden-craft of Shakespeare Henry Nicholson Ellacombe 1868
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