NOUN
- east Asian rhizomatous clump-forming perennial herbs having flowers on long leafless stalks; cosmopolitan in cultivation: day lilies; sometimes placed in subfamily Hemerocallidaceae
How To Use Hemerocallis In A Sentence
- In summer, traditional perennials take over, and peonies, irises and hemerocallis fill the flowery brook.
- Sitting under a rose and clematis arbour in one area, you see through a lunette in a pyracantha hedge to a pond, encircled by lavender, heleniums, hemerocallis, gaillardias and calamintha.
- The nursery offers a range of perennials, but is particularly known for auriculas, hardy geraniums, hemerocallis, pelargoniums and irises. Times, Sunday Times
- The wild forms of hemerocallis have much more dainty flowers than the hybrids. Times, Sunday Times
- New last year from nearby Champion Daylilies in Knoxville,hemerocallis ‘ Bela Lugosi’, was added to the just begun Black Garden area, renamed from the lavender field. Color in the Garden-GBDW Part One « Fairegarden
- Perennials such as iris or hemerocallis will show a noted decrease in blooms over the years if they are not divided.
- Hybrids and cultivars have been classified by hemerocallis aficionados into precise groups, depending on the shape of the flowers. Times, Sunday Times
- Strong and stout, this daylily, hemerocallis ‘Matthew Martin’ from another local daylily farm, Sunshine Hollow, has very thick petals with a slight ruffled edge. Color in the Garden-GBDW Part Three « Fairegarden
- In summer, traditional perennials take over, and peonies, irises and hemerocallis fill the flowery brook.
- They started out about three feet from each other, but the hemerocallis spreads so quickly that now they form a mass that is almost impossible to break apart. Trees, Fruits and Flowers of Minnesota, 1916 Embracing the Transactions of the Minnesota State Horticultural Society,Volume 44, from December 1, 1915, to December 1, 1916, Including the Twelve Numbers of "The Minnesota Horticulturist" for 1916