Nasturtiums means: plural of nasturtium. Below you'll find 7 example sentences showing how to use Nasturtiums in practice.
Nasturtiums meaning
plural of nasturtium
Example types with nasturtiums
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Herbal medicine Nasturtiums have been used in herbal medicine for their antiseptic and expectorant qualities. (15 words)
The front garden is dotted with circular corten steel planters containing herbs and vegetables, including artichokes and nasturtiums. (18 words)
The nasturtiums received their common name because they produce an oil that is similar to that of watercress (Nasturtium officinale). (20 words)
Nasturtiums deter squash beetles, cucumber beetles and other vine boring pests so are an essential for your vegetable garden and with packs starting at £2.20 on Amazon, they’re a very cheap solution to a potentially very harmful problem. (40 words)
A decade or so ago ‘‘salad mixes’’ often contained flowers as well as leaves, especially bright yellow nasturtiums, a bit tough but harmless, and marigolds (Tagetes spp) which sadly are not edible, unlike calendulas. (34 words)
Red and orange nasturtiums are among the rarest flowers players can pick in Disney Dreamlight Valley, and can be found growing wild only in the Forgotten Lands. (27 words)
Example sentences (7)
Nasturtiums deter squash beetles, cucumber beetles and other vine boring pests so are an essential for your vegetable garden and with packs starting at £2.20 on Amazon, they’re a very cheap solution to a potentially very harmful problem.
Red and orange nasturtiums are among the rarest flowers players can pick in Disney Dreamlight Valley, and can be found growing wild only in the Forgotten Lands.
I recently started my seeds – tomatoes, cucuzza squash, climbing zucchini, golden beets, Florida cranberries, nasturtiums, zinnias, edelweiss, various herbs and Roma beans.
A decade or so ago ‘‘salad mixes’’ often contained flowers as well as leaves, especially bright yellow nasturtiums, a bit tough but harmless, and marigolds (Tagetes spp) which sadly are not edible, unlike calendulas.
The front garden is dotted with circular corten steel planters containing herbs and vegetables, including artichokes and nasturtiums.
Herbal medicine Nasturtiums have been used in herbal medicine for their antiseptic and expectorant qualities.
The nasturtiums received their common name because they produce an oil that is similar to that of watercress (Nasturtium officinale).