英:['bʌntʃberɪ]
美:['bʌntʃberɪ]
英:['bʌntʃberɪ]
美:['bʌntʃberɪ]
复数:bunchberries
The first known use of bunchberry was in 1845
1 Common understory herbs are Bear grass, Twin flower, and bunchberry.
常见的林下草本植物有熊草、双花和御膳橘。
2 Dix organized work parties to clear paths and applied for a $2,200 King Conservation District grant to landscape and replant it with native plants — bunchberry, Oregon grape, flowering currant, salal.
3 One of the fastest actions in the plant world is the explosive opening of flowers on the bunchberry dogwood, which happens in just under 0.5 milliseconds.
4 Four of the seventeen species found in the United States are trees; the rest are shrubs, one of them the low-growing bunchberry of our Northern woods.
5 In 2005, they described how the bunchberry dogwood flower shoots its pollen like a medieval catapult.
6 He talked at random of brooks that start nowhere and go nowhere, save over white stones and past watercress; of thin ribbed ferns and of scarlet bunchberries.
7 Do not mistake the bunchberry for the wintergreen.
8 The "bunchberries" must just be ripening on the high ground—nestling scarlet and white amid their glossy leaves.
9 On the way we passed great beds of blossoming cloudberries, which with blossoms of the bunchberry, the Labrador tea, and the pale laurel, made up the list of flowers found so far.
10 Then in the pine woods there would be, she was sure, Star of Bethlehem, Solomon's Seal, the white spray of groundnuts and bunchberries.
11 It, too, grows low on the ground, but the bunchberries are in close clusters at the top of the small plant where the leaves radiate.
12 England was represented by a rose hand-embroidered in silk thread and organza, for example, and Canada by the bunchberry.
13 Across the lake, the Nash Preserve features the state's only natural white pine bluff, where rare bunchberry grows in an upland fen.