|
Definition of Salt reed grass
1. Noun. Tall reedlike grass common in salt meadows.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Salt Reed Grass
Literary usage of Salt reed grass
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Book of Grasses: An Illustrated Guide to the Common Grasses, and the by Mary Francis Baker (1912)
"... a cynosuroides) by the ditch in the marsh SALT REED-GRASS (Spartina ...
by the edge of the marsh SALT REED-GRASS ..."
2. Grasses and Forage Plants: A Practical Treatise, Comprising Their Natural by Charles Louis Flint (1860)
"... and yields large crops at the South, and floating foxtail in Europe. III.
MARSH or SALT GRASSES, among which we have salt reed grass ..."
3. Grasses and Forage Plants: A Practical Treatise Comprising Their Natural by Charles Louis Flint (1887)
"... and yields large crops at the South, and floating foxtail in Europe. III.
MARSH or SALT GRASSES, among which we have salt reed grass ..."
4. A Preliminary Catalogue of the Flora of New Jersey by Nathaniel Lord Britton (1881)
"Salt Reed-grass. Common along salt marshes and salt water ditches. S. juncea, Willd.
Salt Marsh Grass. Common on salt meadows. ..."
5. Stoddart's Encyclopaedia Americana: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and by American supplement, Encyclopaedia britannica (1886)
"... called salt reed grass, has a more robust habit than the last and is confined
in its growth to salt or brackish marshes within tide-water. ..."
6. The Book of Grasses: An Illustrated Guide to the Common Grasses, and the by Mary Francis Baker (1912)
"... a cynosuroides) by the ditch in the marsh SALT REED-GRASS (Spartina ...
by the edge of the marsh SALT REED-GRASS ..."
7. Grasses and Forage Plants: A Practical Treatise, Comprising Their Natural by Charles Louis Flint (1860)
"... and yields large crops at the South, and floating foxtail in Europe. III.
MARSH or SALT GRASSES, among which we have salt reed grass ..."
8. Grasses and Forage Plants: A Practical Treatise Comprising Their Natural by Charles Louis Flint (1887)
"... and yields large crops at the South, and floating foxtail in Europe. III.
MARSH or SALT GRASSES, among which we have salt reed grass ..."
9. A Preliminary Catalogue of the Flora of New Jersey by Nathaniel Lord Britton (1881)
"Salt Reed-grass. Common along salt marshes and salt water ditches. S. juncea, Willd.
Salt Marsh Grass. Common on salt meadows. ..."
10. Stoddart's Encyclopaedia Americana: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and by American supplement, Encyclopaedia britannica (1886)
"... called salt reed grass, has a more robust habit than the last and is confined
in its growth to salt or brackish marshes within tide-water. ..."