Lexicographical Neighbors of Glareal
Literary usage of Glareal
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Flora of Oxfordshire: Being a Topographical and Historical Account of by George Claridge Druce (1886)
"glareal. Dry banks and sandy fields. Local and rare. A. May-Aug. First record, Sib.
1794. 3. Swere. ... glareal. Dry pastures, field banks. Local and rare. ..."
2. The Flora of Berkshire: Being a Topographical and Historical Account of the by George Claridge Druce (1897)
"glareal. Dry pastures, commons on gravelly or sandy soil; local and rare. ...
glareal. Dry fields and commons. Local and rare. A. May—August. ..."
3. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, George Walter Prothero, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle (1819)
"... glareal each other across the swamp like two angry comets ‘denouncing war and
ruin? • This live-carriage, by the way, forms one of the most profitable ..."
4. Annals and Magazine of Natural History by William Jardine (1849)
"... setacea were gathered only on decayed wood; the remainder are chiefly glareal
or viatical, and some of them were also occasionally seen on decayed wood. ..."
5. Health and Education by Charles Kingsley (1887)
"Before you go a step further you will have to eliminate from all your calculations
most of the plants which Watson calls glareal, ie found in cultivated ..."
6. Scientific Lectures and Essays by Charles Kingsley (1893)
"Before you go a step farther you will have to eliminate from all your calculations
most of the plants which Watson calls glareal, ie found in cultivated ..."
7. Transactions of the Botanical Society by Botanical Society of Edinburgh (1850)
"... setacea were gathered only on decayed wood; the remainder are chiefly glareal
or viatical, and some of them were also occasionally seen on decayed wood. ..."