Lexicographical Neighbors of Euonymuses
Literary usage of Euonymuses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Home Gardening: A Manual for the Amateur by William D. Drury (1898)
"... evergreen euonymuses, Hollies, Privets, Caucasian Laurels, ... may be grown
with a fair amount of success are the following :—Variegated euonymuses ..."
2. Journal of Horticulture, Cottage Gardener and Home Farmer (1883)
"Four or five years ago we advised a friend to plant the best varieties of
euonymuses, and now he has bushes which attract the attention of all passers, ..."
3. The London Market Gardens: Or, Flowers, Fruits, and Vegetables as Grown for by C. W. Shaw (1879)
"Seed sown at the time named produces good marketable plants in autumn, which is
the time when they are most plentiful. Hardy Shrubs. Green-leaved euonymuses ..."
4. Gardening (1905)
"... as that will supply the flowers for this year. In some parts of the country
some of these will be in bloom right away. euonymuses ..."
5. My Garden by Louise Beebe Wilder (1916)
"euonymuses, Hawthorns, Crabs, Plums, Andromedas, Roses, Alders, and others.
PRUNING. One needs to be wary of the knife where shrubs are concerned. ..."
6. The MAGAZINE of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and (1857)
"Like all the euonymuses, the latifolius may be easily propagated, either by seeds,
or by cuttings of the young or ripened wood. The seeds should be planted ..."
7. Trees & Shrubs for English Gardens by Ernest Thomas Cook (1908)
"It enjoys a deep rich soil, and is easily propagated from root suckers. Plant at
a distance of 5 feet apart. euonymuses—The true variety of Euonymus alatus ..."
8. The Garden: An Illustrated Weekly Journal of Gardening in All Its Branches by William Robinson (1903)
"... ам bright-leaved euonymuses are f«J welcome even in the greenhouse at th« dull
season, or in a cold house by themselves with other shrubs of value for ..."