scotch thistle การใช้
- Andrew Carnegie commissioned a Scotch thistle damask for his own use.
- Also depicted are the Irish clover, Scotch thistle, English rose, Welsh leek and Australian wattle.
- The habitat is shrubsteppe or desert shrub invasion of " Onopordum acanthium ", Scotch thistle.
- Jeparit s most famous son is former Scotch Thistle which contains the ashes of Sir Robert Menzies.
- The company adopted a flag of red, white and blue, with a Scotch Thistle in the centre.
- It is also known as Scotch thistle, being the plant that was selected by James V as the emblem of Scotland.
- Try less predictable ornamentals, such as Scotch thistle ( which has fuzzy silver leaves ) and mizuna ( with delicate fernlike foliage ).
- The first building in Blackheath, the " Scotch Thistle Inn ", was erected by Andrew Gardner in 1831 and Charles Darwin visited the inn in 1836.
- A centrally placed monumental pediment, which may once have housed a clockface, is decorated with the British lion, scrolls, low relief pilasters, rosettes and features a carved Scotch thistle at its peak.
- Struggling the other evening to stake a particularly menacing Scotch thistle without incurring too great a loss of blood, I suddenly realized that Morticia Addams has become an important influence in my garden.
- The resultant two storey facade is in a Scott; between the lower and upper windows there is a beautifully-worked scroll, the tracery of which interlaces representations of Scotch thistles; and the whole is surmounted by a parapet of bold and attractive designs.
- Another traditional source appears in the form of a Scots proverb; " " Ye maunna tramp on the Scotch thistle, laddie " ", this being immortalised in marble by Glasgow monumental sculptors James Gibson & Co . for the Kelvingrove International Exhibition of 1888.
- However, according to legend, the " guardian thistle " ( see Scotch thistle ) played a vital part in Alexander III, King of Scots'defence of the ancient realm of Scotland against a night-time raiding party of Norwegian Vikings, prior to the Battle of Largs, ( 1263 ); one or more raiders letting out a yell of pain when stepping on a prickly thistle, thus alerting the Scots.