[
US
/mæɡˈnoʊɫjə/
]
[ UK /mæɡnˈəʊliə/ ]
[ UK /mæɡnˈəʊliə/ ]
NOUN
- dried bark of various magnolias; used in folk medicine
- any shrub or tree of the genus Magnolia; valued for their longevity and exquisite fragrant blooms
How To Use magnolia In A Sentence
- Among the 68 trees to be cut are American elms, sycamores, tulip poplars, a couple of Yoshino cherries, a dogwood, and one cucumber magnolia.
- The young leaves of my magnolia look tattered and some have pale spots on the surface.
- In the center of campus, wedged between the six outer buildings, was the Mason Courtyard, a large stone courtyard, filled with groves of magnolias and palmettos.
- OBJECTIVE To establish a method of the determination of the active constituent puerarin in Health Pill and Gegen crude drug and magnolol hi Health Pill and Cortex Magnoliae Officinalis.
- The front garden includes an evergreen magnolia, topiary spirals in pots, standard privets as well as hardy plantings in terracotta pots.
- It's not just marigolds and magnolias that grow abundantly in the fecund heat of the South.
- It speculated on the evolutionary origins of such thermogenesis and observed how it predominates in ancient lineages of flowering plants like magnolias and water lilies.
- The road is strait and spacious and kept in excellent repair by the industrious inhabitants, and is generally bordered by tall and spreading trees as the magnolia, liquid amber, liriodendron, catalpa and live oak, and on the verges of the canals where the road was causewayed, stood the cyprus, lacianthus and magnolia, all planted by nature and left standing by the virtuous inhabitants, to shade the road and perfume the sultry air. Agricultural Resources of Georgia. Address Before the Cotton Planters Convention of Georgia at Macon, December 13, 1860
- But if you have plenty of room against a wall, go for a large wall shrub like Magnolia grandiflora.
- Their favourite was the rose, followed by hellebores, peonies, clematis, magnolias, lilies, euphorbias, primulas, snowdrops, geraniums.