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Example sentences for "grown from"

  • And while some can be grown from seed, the rest have to be propagated by cutting or grafting.

  • Fuchsias are another old favorite easily grown from cuttings, and thriving well in a window.

  • Common kinds may be grown from seed or from cuttings of young wood.

  • A few kinds having no suckers must be grown from seed.

  • It may also be grown from cuttings of the young wood, taken in February and rooted in brisk heat.

  • Although the Mushroom may be grown from seed, it is seldom done except for strictly scientific purposes.

  • Seedlings are easily raised from a sowing in April, or the plant can be grown from division of the roots in spring.

  • With very few exceptions, =all= the favourite plants of the spring garden may be grown from seeds at a cost almost infinitesimal as compared with the raising of named varieties from cuttings and divisions.

  • This plant cannot be grown from seed; only by division of the roots in March or April.

  • How to grow Plants may be grown from seed in sandy soil in flats or pots; young plants may be transplanted in spring in sandy, gravelly, or rocky soil.

  • They may be grown from seed in sandy soil or sandy loam in pots with partial shade and with enough watering to keep the soil moist.

  • How to grow Plants may be grown from seed in flats or pots, but the seed is rare and difficult to get.

  • They may be grown from seed in pots in sandy soil with partial shade and with enough watering to keep the soil moist but not wet.

  • May be grown from seed, which should be soaked in warm water for twenty-four hours, or they may be propagated by layers, cuttings placed in heat, or suckers.

  • They may be grown from seed, but will not allow being divided at the root.

  • It may be grown from seed on any soil, and the roots bear dividing; flowers from June to August.

  • Either of these may be grown from cuttings or division of the plants.

  • Common abutilons may be grown from seed or from cuttings of young wood.

  • It may also be grown from seed, although the types have not become fixed, and a large number of differently marked plants may be had from the same packet.

  • Stocks for budding upon are sometimes grown from cuttings in this way.

  • Apricot stocks can be grown from root-cuttings the same as cherries and other stone-fruits.

  • Grown from cuttings of firm or mature shoots in heat.

  • Attí can be grown from cuttings, but these must not be large ones, i.

  • The attí (Ficus glomerata) may also be grown from cuttings, but these should be rather thinner than those taken from the five trees first mentioned as being the best to plant for shade.

  • It is grown from seed in the forests of Poland.

  • This cherry, as we have seen, is propagated almost entirely from seed though it may easily be grown from layers, cuttings and suckers.

  • Under this heading are grouped many wild cherries in France, grown from seeds, whose trees, leaves and flowers vary as well as the size, taste and time of ripening of the fruits.

  • This old cherry served well the needs of Americans in colonial times when all cherries were grown from pits or suckers.

  • They can be grown from seed or from cuttings under glass, but we think both operations are a little beyond the juvenile gardener.

  • It may be grown from seeds; but this method of propagation is rarely practised, as it is more readily increased by dividing the roots.

  • It may be grown from seeds, but is generally propagated by dividing the roots, either in spring or autumn.

  • It may be grown from seeds, but is generally propagated by dividing the roots either in the spring or fall, and planting the divisions ten inches apart, in rows eighteen inches asunder.

  • Either of the varieties may also be grown from cuttings, which root readily.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "grown from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    before this; comparative embryology; dear fellow; good stuff; great marvel; great talents; grown caterpillar; grown from; grown people; grown person; grown woman; high mountains; highly prized; just outside; last able; little sign; local authority; make thee; marvellous thing; miles away; money refunded; original jurisdiction; pounds weight; saw that; support themselves; wooden house