Sentences with Plants, Sentences about Plants

Sentences with Plants, Sentences about Plants

1. Do you talk to your plants?

2. These look like spinach plants.

3. I have planted some plants in my garden.

4. These plants are resistant to weed killers.

5. I will be watering the plants tomorrow morning.

6. I like to watch plants grow. It is interesting!

7. Never go to a doctor whose office plants have died.

8. Biomass energy is based on biomass raw materials, plants processed and burned to produce electricity.

9. Can we be grateful for music, silence, kind words, beautiful words, art, blank canvasses, space, night, sun, rain, amazing plants, animals..

10. Quite possibly there’s nothing as fine as a big freight train starting across country in early summer, Hardesty thought. That’s when you learn that the tragedy of plants is that they have roots.

11. I grow plants for many reasons: to please my eye or to please my soul, to challenge the elements or to challenge my patience, for novelty or for nostalgia, but mostly for the joy in seeing them grow.

12. I think there’s a supreme power behind the whole thing, an intelligence. Look at all of the instincts of nature, both animals and plants, the very ingenious ways they survive. If you cut yourself, you don’t have to think about it.

 

1. How many trees do you plant on average?

2. He that goes barefoot must not plant thorns.

3. A child needs encouragement like a plant needs water.

4. Always do your best. What you plant now, you will harvest later.

5. What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered.

6. If the single man plant himself indomitably on his instincts, and there abide, the huge world will come round to him.

7. I trust in nature for the stable laws of beauty and utility. Spring shall plant and autumn garner to the end of time.

8. A beautiful bouquet or a long-lasting flowering plant is a traditional gift for women, but I have recommended that both men and women keep fresh flowers in the home for their beauty, fragrance, and the lift they give our spirits.

9. The beauty of a main title is that you establish your main theme and maybe a bit of your secondary theme. You plant the seed that you’re going to go water later in the score. And so, having that removed just made it so much more difficult.

Leave a Reply