Garden
Meanings and phrases
n.
- a plot of ground where plants are cultivated
- the flowers or vegetables or fruits or herbs that are cultivated in a garden
- a yard or lawn adjoining a house
v.
- work in the garden
n.
- a Mid-Atlantic state on the Atlantic; one of the original 13 colonies; New Jersey; Jersey; NJ
n.
- a native of resident of New Jersey; New Jerseyan; New Jerseyite
n.
- a beautiful garden where Adam and Eve were placed at the Creation; when they disobeyed and ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil they were driven from their paradise (the fall of man); Eden
n.
- a state of north central United States bordering on Canada; North Dakota; ND
n.
- tavern with an outdoor area (usually resembling a garden) where beer and other alcoholic drinks are served
- Up until the 1990s, the hotel had a beer garden.
- Since as early as 1997, Calgary-based Big Rock Brewery has sponsored the beer garden.
- People enjoy drinking at the beer garden in Odori Park and on the streets of Susukino.
n.
- a widely distributed North American garden spider; Argiope aurantia
n.
- a facility where trees and shrubs are cultivated for exhibition; arboretum
- The Gardens on Spring Creek is an botanical garden.
- One of the earliest was the Padua botanical garden.
- It is also well known for its botanical garden.
n.
- annual herb used as salad green and garnish; garden pepper cress; pepper grass; pepperwort; Lepidium sativum
adj.
- the usual or familiar type
n.
- a garden featuring flowering plants
- The entry section was adapted and the flower garden was arranged.
- The bird came in the flower garden, but the bird is a manlike bird.
- A walk led east to the flower garden, and another west to the road.
n.
- a garden laid out on regular lines with plants arranged in symmetrical locations or in geometrical designs
- The estate changed from a formal garden in 1840 into a landscape garden.
- During her time at Delitsch, Christiana added a French formal garden to the castle.
- To the southeast of Tatton Hall is the Italian Garden, a formal garden on two terraces.
n.
- a biennial cultivated herb; its stems are candied and eaten and its roots are used medicinally; archangel; Angelica Archangelica
n.
- bushy perennial Old World mint having small white or yellowish flowers and fragrant lemon-flavored leaves; a garden escapee in northern Europe and North America; lemon balm; sweet balm; bee balm; beebalm; Melissa officinalis
n.
- a cart for carrying small loads; has handles and one or more wheels; barrow; lawn cart; wheelbarrow
n.
- minute arthropod often infesting the underground parts of truck-garden and greenhouse crops; garden symphilid; symphilid; Scutigerella immaculata
n.
- chair left outside for use on a lawn or in a garden; lawn chair
n.
- cress cultivated for salads and garnishes
n.
- cultivated European current bearing small edible red berries; red currant; Ribes rubrum
n.
- hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable; eggplant; aubergine; brinjal; eggplant bush; mad apple; Solanum melongena
n.
- small biennial to perennial herb of Europe, northern Africa and western Asia having blue, purple or white flowers; Myosotis sylvatica
n.
- tall rhizomatous plant having very fragrant flowers and rhizomes used medicinally; common valerian; Valeriana officinalis
n.
- a hose used for watering a lawn or garden
n.
- improved garden variety of black nightshade having small edible orange or black berries; wonderberry; sunberry; Solanum nigrum guineese; Solanum melanocerasum; Solanum burbankii
n.
- annual or perennial garden plant having succulent leaves used in salads; widely grown; common lettuce; Lactuca sativa
n.
- frequently considered a weed; Europe and Asia; yellow loosestrife; Lysimachia vulgaris
n.
- strong-growing annual climber having large flowers of all shades of orange from orange-red to yellowish orange and seeds that are pickled and used like capers; Indian cress; Tropaeolum majus
n.
- Asiatic plant resembling spinach often used as a potherb; naturalized in Europe and North America; mountain spinach; Atriplex hortensis
n.
- a party of people assembled for social interaction out of doors; lawn party; fete champetre
- On Saturday, 12 August 1961, the leaders of the GDR attended a garden party at a government guesthouse in , in a wooded area to the north of East Berlin.
- Further statements claimed that the club’s recent publicity including its annual 'secret garden party' drove it to change its name from Kensington to Jodhpur.
- In May 2009, he was invited by the BNP representative on the London Assembly, Richard Barnbrook, to accompany him to a Buckingham Palace garden party hosted by Queen Elizabeth II.
n.
- the flattened to cylindric inflated multi-seeded fruit of the common pea plant
- plant producing peas usually eaten fresh rather than dried; garden pea plant; common pea; Pisum sativum
- fresh pea; green pea
n.
- plant producing peas usually eaten fresh rather than dried; garden pea; common pea; Pisum sativum
n.
- annual herb used as salad green and garnish; common garden cress; pepper grass; pepperwort; Lepidium sativum
n.
- any of various flowers of plants of the genus Dianthus cultivated for their fragrant flowers; pink
n.
- any of a variety of plants usually grown especially in a flower or herb garden
- It is grown as an ornamental garden plant and can also be used as a cut flower.
- It is used as an ornamental garden plant, requiring moisture and shade in the summer.
- "Phuopsis stylosa" is native to the Caucasus and Iran, and is widely grown elsewhere as a garden plant.
n.
- a rake used by gardeners
n.
- long cultivated hybrid of Rheum palmatum; stems often cooked in pies or as sauce or preserves; pie plant; Rheum cultorum; Rheum rhabarbarum; Rheum rhaponticum
n.
- erect European annual often grown as a salad crop to be harvested when young and tender; rocket; roquette; rocket salad; arugula; Eruca sativa; Eruca vesicaria sativa
n.
- heavy cast-iron cylinder used to flatten lawns
n.
- any of several inedible snails of the genus Helix; often destructive pests
n.
- low perennial with small silvery-green ovate to hastate leaves; French sorrel; Rumex scutatus
- European sorrel with large slightly acidic sagittate leaves grown throughout north temperate zone for salad and spring greens; sour dock; Rumex acetosa
n.
- a spade used by gardeners
n.
- a spider common in European gardens; Aranea diademata
n.
- widely cultivated; cultivated strawberry; Fragaria ananassa
n.
- minute arthropod often infesting the underground parts of truck-garden and greenhouse crops; garden centipede; symphilid; Scutigerella immaculata
n.
- used for working in gardens or yards; lawn tool
n.
- a trowel used by gardeners
n.
- fresh fruits and vegetable grown for the market; produce; green goods; green groceries
n.
- European violet typically having purple to white flowers; widely naturalized; sweet violet; English violet; Viola odorata
n.
- a variety of webworm; Loxostege similalis
n.
- a garden for growing herbs
- The herb garden displays beds of coloring, cooking, fragrant and healing herbs.
- The cloister yard may have been used originally as a herb garden ("hortus medicus").
- The remains of the 12th-century Soulseat Abbey are situated by the herb garden on the south side of Soulseat Loch.
n.
- a garden where hops are grown; hop field
n.
- a greenhouse in which plants are arranged in a pleasing manner; conservatory; hothouse
n.
- a small garden where vegetables are grown; vegetable garden; vegetable patch
- The grounds feature specimen trees and a walled kitchen garden.
- Nearby was the kitchen garden which complemented the physic garden and a cemetery orchard.
- Walled gardens around the Castle are of late C17 or earlier origin, as is the kitchen garden.
n.
- a garden where fruit and vegetables are grown for marketing
- Evans runs a boutique piggery and market garden in Anson Bay.
- He left school at age 15, to work on his father's orchard and market garden.
- The western portion of the Southport Ditch had been utilised in the 19th century as a market garden and was known as the Sunken Gardens.
n.
- a garden featuring rocks; usually alpine plants; rockery
- It is the inimitable rock garden in the whole world.
- There is no rock garden like this in the whole world.
- It is suitable for cultivation in the alpinum or rock garden.
n.
- a garden on a flat roof of a building
n.
- a garden for growing roses
- Included on the grounds are outdoor sculptures and a rose garden.
- The park was also rearranged while the rose garden was planted behind the building.
- Clintonville is home to Whetstone Park, which includes the Park of Roses, a rose garden.
n.
- a garden set below the level of the ground surrounding it
n.
- a public garden where tea is served
n.
- a farm where vegetables are grown for market; truck farm
n.
- a small garden where vegetables are grown; kitchen garden; vegetable patch
- She is believed to live in a wonderful vegetable garden.
- Ojii-chan dies peacefully while tending his vegetable garden.
- Nofinishi also worked in her vegetable garden during her spare time.
n.
- a kitchen garden planted during wartime to relieve food shortages
n.
- the facility where wild animals are housed for exhibition; menagerie; zoo
E.g.
- This had a walled garden and orchard.
- The walled garden is all that remains of the Rathbone estate on the park.
- This pediment survives and is now above the gateway into the walled garden.
E.g.
- Edward La Trobe Bateman was involved in garden design work here in the 1880s.
- Edward Milner founded the garden design and landscape architecture firm of Milner-White.
- She also had considerable influence on the development of garden design in the royal estates.
E.g.
- This park is a public garden located below the "bastion" of Piazza Bagolino.
- Ah Toy Garden Ah Toy Garden is a garden located within Payette National Forest.
- This traditional wooden mansion has a fine Japanese garden located on its grounds.
E.g.
- The sculpture garden is part of the Lachine Museum.
- It has a lecture hall, a small cafe and a sculpture garden.
- There is a sculpture garden on the south side of Olympian Parade.
E.g.
- There is a community garden in the park.
- The yard of the old synagogue has been turned into a beautiful community garden.
- A community garden, offering small garden plots to area residents, is also available.
E.g.
- Millay grew her own vegetables in a small garden.
- The courtyard contains a small garden with Magnolia trees and roses.
- Kościuszko's small garden retreat still stands today as Kosciuszko's Garden.
E.g.
- There is a large garden in the rear also.
- The gallery backs onto a large garden populated with various flowers.
- The patrician Villa Balduino-Serra is home to a large garden and park.
E.g.
- The public garden onsite is designed by Piet Oudolf.
- This park is a public garden located below the "bastion" of Piazza Bagolino.
- The city corporation is housed in its own premises located at Jagat Circle, public garden Kalaburagi.
E.g.
- However, the chairman, John Sulman, was instrumental in applying the ideas of the garden city movement to Griffin's plan.
- He became a journalist, based in Letchworth, where he developed an interest in town planning and the garden city movement.
- It was inspired by the English garden city movement; hence the original English name "Park" (in Catalan the name is "Parc Güell").
E.g.
- The estate changed from a formal garden in 1840 into a landscape garden.
- The villa has an English landscape garden, which covers about 9,300 square meters.
- In the mid-18th century the style was replaced by the more less-geometric and more natural English landscape garden.
E.g.
- Crystal wanders into someone's back garden.
- A little way south from the back garden lies the River Tees.
- He flies his new drone in the back garden and quickly loses it.
E.g.
- People often surround their house and garden with a hedge.
- Thus the house and garden have the rare ability to illustrate Norman Lindsay's creative process.
- In 2012 Warren gifted his house and garden to the people of New Zealand via the Ohinetahi Charitable Trust.
E.g.
- A group of Fogelberg fans created a memorial garden in Riverfront Park in 2010.
- His ashes were buried in a special memorial garden at Philippolis on 4 April 1998.
- A historical marker and memorial garden were dedicated on the 1984 Day of Remembrance.
E.g.
- Burkill similarly wrote a study on the history of the Singapore botanic garden.
- There they established an extensive botanic garden designed by an Italian landscape artist.
- The largest green area is the , a horticultural exhibition park and botanic garden established in 1961.
E.g.
- The Walk of Fame is designed as a garden area that connects the clubhouse to the studio near the 17th green.
- It is used in the Sylhet tea garden area by Telegu, Santhali, Nepali and Rai communities as a lingua franca.
- Restoration of the Church and rectory is on-going and a new brick cloister garden area has recently been built.
E.g.
- Later it was used as a garden centre.
- It served the consumer DIY market sector, and most stores had some form of garden centre.
- A garden centre has been developed opposite the Tesco Store and a golf centre to the other side.
E.g.
- He was a patron of the garden designer Ji Cheng.
- Her siblings include author Alison Leslie Gold, poet Ted Greenwald and garden designer Nancy Greenwald.
- The French Baroque garden reached its summit under Louis XIV, due to his garden designer, André Le Nôtre.
E.g.
- Some of the garden plants remain growing in the woodland.
- At least three species are cultivated as ornamental garden plants.
- The Hardy Plant Society is concerned about the conservation of garden plants.
E.g.
- Kalmia Gardens Kalmia Gardens (30 acres) is a mature botanical garden located at 1624 West Carolina Avenue, Hartsville, South Carolina.
- Jardin Paléobotanique The Jardin Paléobotanique is a botanical garden located in Les Millières, Soulce-Cernay, Doubs, Franche-Comté, France.
- Devonian Gardens (Calgary) Devonian Gardens is a large indoor park and botanical garden located in the downtown core of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
E.g.
- The palace has 775 rooms, and the garden is the largest private garden in London.
- No trace of the timber halt remains, and the site is now in use as a private garden.
- Kenneth Booth, the original landscaper, in the 1970s, designed the private garden for the Imperial Tobacco Factory HQ.
E.g.
- Its ethnobotanical garden contains sixteen beds of medicinal plants from the Himalayas.
- The garden contains plants providing fruits, berries, and seeds that attract a variety of birds.
- The garden contains plants, stones and rocks which have been placed to provide a natural balance.
E.g.
- The fragments of Harker's bust are in the front garden of an empty house up the street.
- A guard was asleep in the front garden and another was on duty at the rear of the house.
- The new design included a formal front garden separating the building from the 'Place des Palais'.
E.g.
- Benefits of "hügelkultur" garden beds include water retention and warming of soil.
- It has since been replaced with central garden beds and tree plantings in the middle of the streets.
- The practice of making raised garden beds or mounds filled with rotting wood is also called "hügelkultur" in German.