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Songwriter Tommie Connor also wrote English lyrics with the title "Lily of the Lamplight" in 1944. [6] Another English translation was done by Theodore Stephanides during World War II and published in his memoir Climax in Crete in 1946.
Veltheimia bracteata is a species of plant. It belongs to the genus Veltheimia, which contains only one other species, Velthemia capensis. [2] Veltheimia bracteata is commonly referred to as the forest lily, sand onion, or red hot poker [2] (though the term "red hot poker" is also applied to species in the genus Kniphofia).
The plan is mostly successful, with Lamplight stealing the president's money, though Lily is forced to use knockout gas on him when he pulls a gun on her. After the conclusion of the mission to eliminate Corpse, Grete returns to the bakery to get a meat pie for the rest of Lamplight, and is pleasantly surprised to see that the baker has taken ...
Lily of the valley (Convallaria majalis / ˌ k ɒ n v ə ˈ l ɛər i ə m ə ˈ dʒ eɪ l ɪ s /), [2] sometimes written lily-of-the-valley, [3] is a woodland flowering plant with sweetly scented, pendent, bell-shaped white flowers borne in sprays in spring.
Maianthemum dilatatum (snakeberry, two-leaved Solomon's seal or false lily of the valley) is a common rhizomatous perennial flowering plant that is native to western North America from northern California to the Aleutian islands, and Asia across the Kamchatka Peninsula, Japan, and Korea.
Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea, also called Sacred narcotic lily of the Nile and sacred blue lily of the Nile Index of plants with the same common name This page is an index of articles on plant species (or higher taxonomic groups) with the same common name ( vernacular name).
Maianthemum stellatum (star-flowered, starry, or little false Solomon's seal, or simply false Solomon's seal; star-flowered lily-of-the-valley [3] or starry false lily of the valley; [4] syn. Smilacina stellata) is a species of flowering plant, native across North America.
The flower is pollinated by bumblebees and other bees. The bulbs are an important and preferred food of the grizzly bear. Mule deer readily eat the foliage. [11] [12] [13]After hummingbirds migrate 1,500 miles each year from Mexico to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado they collect energy from the nectar of the lilies, however, rising temperatures from global warming cause the flowers to bloom ...