How To Use Lupin In A Sentence

  • Dressed as the werewolf Remus Lupin, Mr. Oosting says he feels very close to his posse from the Netherlands. Harry Potter: London Fans Queue Up in Piccadilly to Buy the Final Installment - ArtsBeat Blog - NYTimes.com
  • Fusarium wilt kills plants by cutting off nutrient supply from the roots and is one of the biggest dangers facing lupin production in Europe and Russia.
  • When older wolves can no longer hunt successfully, younger wolves share their kill with them, in what MacNulty describes as a lupine version of Social Security. EurekAlert! - Breaking News
  • I also saw a beautiful species of Lupin, having pale green villous lingulate * Travels Through North & South Carolina, Georgia, East & West Florida, the Cherokee Country, the Extensive Territories of the Muscogulges, or Creek Confederacy, and the Country of the Chactaws; Containing An Account of the Soil and Natural Producti
  • They argued that the lupine fantasy could be seen as a fundamental challenge to Western notions of subjectivity.
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  • Yes, the station had a perfectly charming garden including a herbaceous border, rose beds, lupins and mop-headed bay trees in green tubs.
  • M'well, it happened the morning I went to pick lupin seeds. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • Roses are beginning to bloom, delphiniums are tall and lupins dot the beds with their spikes of bright colour.
  • Roses are beginning to bloom, delphiniums are tall and lupins dot the beds with their spikes of bright colour.
  • Items to be covered include options in crop sequences, wheat breeding directions, tramline farming, potential for durum wheats, lupins and various pests and their control.
  • The genetic differentiation into winter and summer annual biotypes in grain lupin and pennycress is also known to be under the control of one or two genes.
  • The latter was fiercely jealous, and if Parsons showed obvious affection toward someone, Patsy howled as though she were calling upon all her lupine ancestors to come forth and carry off the intruder.
  • I had them all this summer - a ladybird poppy, lupin, phlox, busy Lizzie, begonia, fuchsia and foxglove and many, many more.
  • Outside the villages, the fields and mountainsides are awash with jasmine, wild lupins, broom, poppies, cornflowers and white wistaria, leading the eye to gentle slopes cloaked in velvety green grass and pockets of dark green forest.
  • It was made of barley; certain herbs, such as lupine and skirret, were used as substitutes for hops. Smith's Bible Dictionary
  • Charging a measly 20 bucks, Canada's favourite lupine hippie rocked a sold-out audience at das Kool Haus for pretty close to an hour and 45 minutes.
  • We have found the wild tulip, the primrose, the lupine, the eardrop, the larkspur, and creeping hollyhock, and a beautiful flower resembling the bloom of the beech tree, but in bunches as large as a small sugarloaf, and of every variety of shade, to red and green. The Passing of the Frontier; a chronicle of the old West
  • Pink spikes and white and vivid blue spikes; masses of brown and orange cups, like low-growing tulips; ranks of beautiful vetches and purple lupines; escholtzias, like immense sweeps of golden sunlight; wild sweet peas; trumpet-shaped blossoms whose name no one knew, -- all flung broadcast over the face of the land, and in such stintless quantities that it dazzled the mind to think of as it did the eyes to behold them. Clover
  • Resembling the regular lupin, the false lupin produces flowers much looser up the stem in a violet-blue.
  • While the downtown commercial area has been thoroughly cleaned up, in the hotel zone, native blue lupin flowers are still all but obscured by big whitish drifts left by the volcano. Ash From Chilean Volcano Craters Argentine Towns
  • As we climb, the maze of trees, ferns, and blueberry bushes gives way to subalpine meadows painted with purple lupine, pale blue gentians, crimson columbine, and yellow arnica.
  • Ogre emerged sporting a large lupine mask, flanked by Key on a synth riser, a live drummer and a guitarist wielding a double-necked axe straight out of a Thor video.
  • I said to myself at once that the block of stone disturbed by the pickaxe had been placed there with a very curious exactness, that the least knock was bound to make it fall and that, in falling, it must inevitably reduce the head of the false Arsene Lupin to pulp, in such a way as to make it utterly irrecognizable. The Hollow Needle; Further adventures of Arsene Lupin
  • The girls get their costumes ripped off by the lupine guy in the white jacket and ripped jeans.
  • Its perennial plants are complemented by azaleas, hydrangeas and lupins in pots.
  • Timis, the alpha bitch in her pack, was a savvy survivor, and she opened his eyes to the range of lupine resourcefulness in Romania.
  • From the living room, family room, and my desk in the office, you look past the dwarf pine trees and lupines to the bay.
  • Blue lupins flowered in the olive groves; the fields had the earth-smell of new beginnings.
  • Over 65% of the crop was wheat, 20% barley and the remaining 15% was made up of canola, lupins, oats, triticale and field peas.
  • Part of the charm of the lupine is the continual stir of its plumes to airs not suspected otherwhere. The Land of Little Rain
  • Alpenglow on Mount Princeton complements vivid fields of lupine, aster, and Indian paintbrush near Route 321.
  • Then came perennial beds with roses, lilies, foxgloves, lupins, daisies, shrubs, and more.
  • The slugs also preferred the leaves of lucerne, white clover and lupins, to the wheat plants.
  • Beneath the dead trees, the forest floor is awash in fresh grasses and sporadic thick blooms of lupine, arnica, penstemon, and other wild flowers.
  • When a vampire bites a werewolf, the vampire and wolf will die, because lupine blood is undrinkable, and the werewolf has a nasty reaction to the vampire's fangs.
  • flower-prairie," with its thousands of gay corollas of every tint and shade -- with its golden helianthus, its white argemone, its purple cleome, its pink malvaceae, its blue lupin -- its poppy worts of red and orange -- even these fair tints grow tiresome to the sight, and the eye yearns for form and motion. The War Trail The Hunt of the Wild Horse
  • The closest I can come to describing his psychosis is that Peter believes that he is a werewolf, without any of the lupine transformation normally associated with that legend.
  • In the month of July a gorgeous assemblage of martagon lilies take the place of the lupine and trilliums; these splendid lilies vary from orange to the brightest scarlet; various species of sunflowers and Canadian Crusoes
  • Lupin and his boys are saved from capture by a blonde bombshell and an Indian in a wheelchair.
  • _Amorpha_, with the same _psoralea_, and a dwarf species of _lupinus_, are the characteristic plants. The Exploring Expedition to the Rocky Mountains, Oregon and California To which is Added a Description of the Physical Geography of California, with Recent Notices of the Gold Region from the Latest and Most Authentic Sources
  • Through clever manipulations, Lupin gets into the wine vault but it is a trap set by Zenigata!
  • On the thatched roof above the Plexiglas light bubble and long-dead solar panels is a rainbow wind sock; a sky-blue 1940s truck muralled with latex paint clouds is parked out front amid a patch of lupins, Shasta daisies, Scotch broom, and California poppies. Shampoo Planet
  • Planted along with traditional peonies, irises and chrysanthemums, are lupines, veronicas and Canterbury bells, a contemporary feature rarely seen in Japanese gardens.
  • Other gardeners prefer to interplant them with spring flowers such as columbines, daisies, dianthus, Iceland poppies, lupines, and peonies.
  • Its perennial plants are complemented by azaleas, hydrangeas and lupins in pots.
  • _Amorpha_, with the same _psoralea_, and a dwarf species of _lupinus_, are the characteristic plants. The Exploring Expedition to the Rocky Mountains, Oregon and California To which is Added a Description of the Physical Geography of California, with Recent Notices of the Gold Region from the Latest and Most Authentic Sources
  • Other gardeners prefer to interplant them with spring flowers such as columbines, daisies, dianthus, Iceland poppies, lupines, and peonies.
  • They traveled on to Bydgoszcz, past fields of yellow lupine blow - ing distractedly in the intermittent breezes. Briar Rose
  • Other gardeners prefer to interplant them with spring flowers such as columbines, daisies, dianthus, Iceland poppies, lupines, and peonies.
  • The slugs also preferred the leaves of lucerne, white clover and lupins, to the wheat plants.
  • But since this would involve draping myself over couches wearing a toga and sucking grapes it would lack novelty, being all too similar to an ordinary Saturday night chez Lupin.
  • Conner rose and stretched, his lupine muzzle gaping wide in a colossal yawn, the muscles rippling across his broad back.
  • In lupins, division of the shoot meristem into four quadrants gives four new meristems that each develop a shoot.
  • The classic perennial lupines, with flower spikes that tower above their foliage like colorful candles, just got better.
  • They told her that the black and white cow had calved, and that the blue lupins had come up in the garden, that the old sow had died, that Jenny, the chintz cat, had kittened and that the lop-eared rabbit had a litter. The Three Sisters
  • Swedes, manigolds, fodder roots, hay, lucerne(alfalfa), clover, sainfoin, forage kale, lupines, vetches and similar forage products, whether or not in the form of pellets.
  • The young doctor was crouching in the middle of the floor staring at the shattered remains of a glass vial, her lupine tail lashing.
  • The students planted their homegrown lupines on land managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service near the Concord airport, a protected area which was recently expanded by 400 acres.
  • For such a man these herbs should be used: lupin, helenium (which we call elf-dock), marsh mallow, dock elder, wormwood and strawberry leaves.
  • Other gardeners prefer to interplant them with spring flowers such as columbines, daisies, dianthus, Iceland poppies, lupines, and peonies.
  • Why , I had always supposed that Mrs. Lupin and you would make a match of it.
  • It was made of barley; certain herbs, such as lupine and skirret, were used as substitutes for hops. Smith's Bible Dictionary
  • -- the tabellion was on terms of spoken gallantry with Madame Soudry, who had a weakness for Lupin, though he was blond and wore spectacles. Sons of the Soil
  • I happened to see the shards of one on Miss Rondel's kitchen table the day I went to collect the lupin seeds. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • Here, he says, let there be lupins; and Over there, he adds, montbretia shall be no more seen. Try Anything Twice
  • Items to be covered include options in crop sequences, wheat breeding directions, tramline farming, potential for durum wheats, lupins and various pests and their control.
  • Enjoy lobelia, lupins and delphiniums while you can.
  • His name is Nick Dickory, and he has lupine features.
  • For such a man these herbs should be used: lupin, helenium (which we call elf-dock), marsh mallow, dock elder, wormwood and strawberry leaves.
  • These sugars, normally associated with the seed desiccation process, apparently are not involved in the WD responses of lupin vegetative tissues.
  • Around the barn a flagged terrace is encircled by cottage garden plants, such as delphiniums, rambling roses, geraniums, dianthus and lupins.
  • When Peter came upon the scene he found Linda, flushed and brilliant eyed, holding before him a big bouquet of alder bloom, the last of the lilacs she had found in a cool, shaded place, pink filaree, blue lupin, and white mahogany panicles. Her father`s daughter
  • Some perennials are relatively short-lived; lupines and primroses, for example, may live for only 2 to 5 years, though the seed they drop often produces new plants.
  • It is striking to reflect upon how overwhelmingly male the cast is: every character in the text, excluding the husband in his lupine form and the wife, is a man.
  • As we climb, the maze of trees, ferns, and blueberry bushes gives way to subalpine meadows painted with purple lupine, pale blue gentians, crimson columbine, and yellow arnica.
  • Other gardeners prefer to interplant them with spring flowers such as columbines, daisies, dianthus, Iceland poppies, lupines, and peonies.
  • The end of the epic was out of sight but inevitable - a favoured lupine tactic is to slowly, methodically walk their prey to death. Times, Sunday Times
  • Likewise, the tribe keeps close contact with their rare lupine Kin living on great estates, primarily in Russia and western Canada.
  • Poster with lupine as the "intelligent" interpretation of start writing.
  • Continuing on, you begin to see some clarkias, a few mariposa lilies and some lupine.
  • Each time the man fired his flame-thrower, its counter-thrust pushed him further out of the lupine captain's reach.
  • There are flowers everywhere in a carpet of colour: orange globemallows and white asters and purple lupins.
  • Items to be covered include options in crop sequences, wheat breeding directions, tramline farming, potential for durum wheats, lupins and various pests and their control.
  • As we climb, the maze of trees, ferns, and blueberry bushes gives way to subalpine meadows painted with purple lupine, pale blue gentians, crimson columbine, and yellow arnica.
  • He scowled at the amount of blood decorating the floor in front of the wolf and then roughly grabbed the back of the lupine captain's head.
  • Dropping down through the pungent pines, they passed woods-embowered cottages, quaint and rustic, of artists and writers, and went on across wind-blown rolling sandhills held to place by sturdy lupine and nodding with pale CHAPTER VI
  • Fire suppression, development and conversion of land to agricultural use have destroyed many of the pine barrens and oak savannas where the lupine grows.
  • It is recommended that gardeners use transplants rather than seeds for growing bluebonnets and other species of hybrid lupines in their gardens.
  • Around the barn a flagged terrace is encircled by cottage garden plants, such as delphiniums, rambling roses, geraniums, dianthus and lupins.
  • Lupin has been a favorite of anime fans for three decades, and it's not difficult to see why.
  • With media attention hitting fever pitch, a strangely lupine man called Wolf decides to take up the hunt, interrupting Dusty's incompetent press conference.
  • In the Scottish Highlands, environmental campaigners and landowners wrangled over the possibility of reintroducing wolves to a landscape devoid of lupine presence since the 1700s.
  • Fusarium wilt and rust cause major problems in the lupin industry overseas, but not in Australia.
  • Figure 2 demonstrates a rapid but not instantaneous decrease in elongation of primary roots of lupin when pressure was applied to entire axes.
  • Lupinus albus and luteus … as well as augustifolius … come from southern Europe and Lupinus mutabilis comes from the Andes and is uniquely adapted to growing at high altitudes. Beans: A History and My Legume Love Affair Ninth Helping Round-Up
  • Planted along with traditional peonies, irises and chrysanthemums, are lupines, veronicas and Canterbury bells, a contemporary feature rarely seen in Japanese gardens.
  • There's Tutti Frutti, a new lupin with bicoloured flower spikes, Tequila Sunrise, a bronze foliaged antirrhinum, and Creme Brulee, a new phlox, all from Thompson and Morgan.
  • Critics have railed against bouts of apparent disingenuousness, self-absorption and the singer's lupine cries of a last chapter.
  • Finally, the North and South American west coastal species appear to have evolved from the Old World smooth-seeded lupins, or from the same ancestral stock.
  • The lupine is another of those interesting plants which go to sleep at night. Wild Flowers Worth Knowing
  • We have found the wild tulip, the primrose, the lupine, the eardrop, the larkspur, and creeping hollyhock, and a beautiful flower resembling the bloom of the beech tree, but in bunches as large as a small sugar-loaf, and of every variety of shade, to red and green. History of the Donner Party, a Tragedy of the Sierra
  • Seeds dispersed by wind fell on the soil leading to the appearance of hardy plants like fireweed and lupine.
  • Mom wrote about choosing lupine flowers for her blog's background over the pink breast cancer ribbon theme expected of her. More Than a Pink Ribbon
  • On the floor of an ancient volcanic crater hidden deep within Washington's Gifford Pinchot National Forest, blue lupines and yellow mountain daisies poke through an open meadow padded with beargrass and moss.
  • Some other things should be sown as early as possible in the open ground, – candytuft, larkspur, poppies, mignonnette, lupins, sweet alyssum, clarkia, and such hardy annuals. Gardening by Myself
  • Lupin is the first to file a generic plea for Fortamet and upon receiving final approval from the FDA it will be entitled to 180 days of marketing exclusivity for the 500 milligram and 1 gram strengths of its product. Lupin Expects Better Operating Margin in Two Years
  • The Wolf spent his downtime in lupine form, as constantly transforming back and forth gave him a hangover.
  • Seventeen species/botanical forms representing all the Old World lupins and one New World species were used in the experiment.
  • The first is that you have been strong-minded enough to cut back the early herbaceous plants such as oriental poppies, delphiniums, geraniums and lupins.
  • Craig fielded heaps of questions during the day about why lupins were being targeted, why other weeds are not such a threat, and what is special about the wrybill.
  • Finally the willow tree was heavily pruned and the Euonymus and three lupins were planted.
  • If George Smiley -- the unflappable mole-hunter from "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" and other le Carré books -- were around, he'd deliver a wry rebuff to the author about how ennobling it must be to live in a world of such certainty, where Western intelligence is reliably lupine and the Muslim world a verdant pasture of 95% innocent lambs. Suspicious Minds
  • Meanwhile, out on the patio, the sole survivor of the six lupins we planted last year has produced a splendid spear of pale pink blossom.
  • As we climb, the maze of trees, ferns, and blueberry bushes gives way to subalpine meadows painted with purple lupine, pale blue gentians, crimson columbine, and yellow arnica.
  • The phrase ‘lush desert’ may reek of oxymoron, but in springtime the Sonoran - with its massive saguaros and organ-pipe cacti, as well as Mexican gold poppies, magenta owl clover, and indigo desert lupine - is just that.
  • I couldn't see the wolves, nor was I expert enough in lupine vocalization to determine whether their yelps signaled a chase or something else. Phil Caputo: Old Age and Elk Hunting in the Rocky Mountains
  • Then came perennial beds with roses, lilies, foxgloves, lupines, daisies, shrubs, and more.
  • Now there bloomed hollyhocks and the blushing amber eremurus, more brilliant than the lupin, yellow below and rising to a red color at its tip like a flaming candle. Call Of The Heart
  • Planted along with traditional peonies, irises and chrysanthemums, are lupines, veronicas and Canterbury bells, a contemporary feature rarely seen in Japanese gardens.
  • I want blooming roses, daisies, tritoma, canna, coreopsis, sweet william, lobelia, lupins, gypsophilia, pansies, and the like.
  • Now that he'd had such luck with the lupin seeds, Peter wondered whether he might try to negotiate a setting of eggs. SOMETHING IN THE WATER
  • Lupine and starflower flowed in ribbons across our path. The Welkening
  • Pinks and columbines, mullein and Canterbury bells, the burning blue of lupin and larkspur, the magenta plush tassels of love-lies-bleeding, the streaked and goffered rosettes of the French marigolds – they have about them the harmonious confusion, the riotous immobility of a crowd of stage peasantry during the principals 'duet. Try Anything Twice
  • Roses are beginning to bloom, delphiniums are tall and lupins dot the beds with their spikes of bright colour.
  • Around the barn a flagged terrace is encircled by cottage garden plants, such as delphiniums, rambling roses, geraniums, dianthus and lupins.
  • Yellow lupins will sit with rodgersia, irises, peonies and more. Times, Sunday Times
  • Two young women howl at the moon in this likeable dark comedy about getting in touch with your lupine side.
  • Second, we raised gelechiid larvae on greenhouse-grown lupins with factorial manipulation of competitors and soil N and P. Elites TV
  • Around San Francisco and the bay counties you will count, after the poppy and baby blue-eyes, the shining yellow buttercup, the blue and yellow lupines that grow in the sand, the tall thistle whose sharp, prickly leaves and thorny red blossoms spell "Let-me-alone," the blue flag-lilies and red paint-brush, yellow cream-cups, and wild mustard, and an orange pentstemon. Stories of California
  • But since this would involve draping myself over couches wearing a toga and sucking grapes it would lack novelty, being all too similar to an ordinary Saturday night chez Lupin.
  • The lupine eyes that are his trademark narrowed. Times, Sunday Times
  • Although Andean lupines are still used in heart of Inca country, [l] upines were completely effaced from the culinary record in the West. Beans: A History and My Legume Love Affair Ninth Helping Round-Up
  • Roses are beginning to bloom, delphiniums are tall and lupins dot the beds with their spikes of bright colour.
  • We have found the wild tulip, the primrose, the lupine, the eardrop, the larkspur, and creeping hollyhock, and a beautiful flower resembling the blossom of the beech tree, but in bunches as large as The Expedition of the Donner Party and its Tragic Fate
  • _ "In plant-lore 'lupine' means wolfish, and is suggestive of the Evil One. Selections from the Poems and Plays of Robert Browning
  • Enjoy lobelia, lupins and delphiniums while you can.
  • There's "character development" to break up the lupine action, though, as plane-crash survivors cope with their Alaskan version of Deliverance. This week's new films
  • When she was in lupine form, she was, unsurprisingly, a black wolf, and not a very big one really, but tense and coiled as a well-oiled metal spring, and twice as powerful as any.
  • Given that this is a year in which a woman director has been awarded an Oscar (a unique event), permit me to link to a much earlier crime film (directed by Ida Lupino) based on Billy Cook's crime spree: The Hitch-Hiker (has an odd beginning: john lemmon/citroen) Behind the scenes at the UK's highest court
  • Like a tiny pink lupin with vetch-like pinnate leaves, this pea relative is said to have been introduced from France, where it was called "St Foyn" in the 17th century. Country diary: Wenlock Edge
  • It's Thewlis who does the best job, realising Lupin as honestly and beautifully as his book-based counterpart.
  • Arranged in concentric circles, the houses of The Den were well-distanced from each other, perhaps owing to the werewolves' lupine need for space to run around in.
  • Their curiosity got the better of them when they noticed that, unlike other crops, plants in the legume family - beans, peas, alfalfa, lupines, vetch - thrived even in nitrogen-deficient soils.
  • Then there are to be eschscholtzias, dahlias, sunflowers, zinnias, scabiosa, portulaca, yellow violas, yellow stocks, yellow sweet-peas, yellow lupins -- everything that is yellow or that has a yellow variety. Elizabeth and Her German Garden
  • The ground was enamelled with lilies, the helianthus and cineraria flourished, and the deep-green leaves and blue blossom of the lupin contrasted with the prickly stem and scarlet flower of the euphorbia. The Englishwoman in America
  • Try fennel for the Anise Swallowtail; lupine for blues; hollyhocks and borage for the Painted Lady; and grasses for satyrs and skippers.

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