Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There isn't enough information to know if field scabious is safe for use as medicine or what the possible side effects might be.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for field scabious.
Field scabious is a flower normally associated with summer, flowering from late June until September.
The appropriate dose of field scabious depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
It contains a wide range of flowering plants, including wild carrot, yellow-wort and field scabious.
Its leaves are also un-lobed unlike Field scabious, and are arranged in opposite pairs.
Field scabious is an herb.
For it was the first time that I ever saw cowslips, bluebells and field scabious blooming at the same time.
I have perhaps an uncommon liking for hard consonants, so words like scabious, as in Field Scabious, appeal to me.
Field scabious has chemicals that help to break up chest congestion by thinning mucous and making it easier to cough up.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of field scabious during pregnancy and breast-feeding.
In the summer meadow, I planted plug plants of summer-flowering native flowers, such as field scabious, knapweed and meadow geranium.
Knautia arvensis, commonly known as Field Scabious, is a species in the genus Knautia.
The embankments have colonised naturally and support yellow-wort, lady's bedstraw, ploughman's-spikenard, field scabious and marjoram.
Flowering herbs include Common Rock-rose, Harebell, Chalk Milkwort and Field Scabious.
At the top of the slope the geology produces a limestone flora, including Common Milkwort, Field Scabious, Hairy Violet and Yellow-wort.
There is a limestone-loving range of plants at the top of the slope which include Common Milkwort, Field Scabious, Yellow-wort and Hairy Violet.
The ridges support a diverse flora and these include Cowslip, Burnet-saxifrage, Common Restharrow, Pepper-saxifrage (Silaum silaus) and Field Scabious.
The grassland flora is made up of a wide range of limestone-loving plants which include Field Scabious, Lady's Bedstraw, Common Bird's-foot-trefoil and Oxeye Daisy.
Field Scabious (Knautia arvensis) The flowers and leaves of this herb were made into ointments for various skin disorders including gangrene, sores, and ulcers, as well as dandruff.
These include Fairy Flax, Harebell, Dropwort, Field Scabious, Lady's Bedstraw, Quaking-grass and Woolly Thistle.
Meadow plants include Cowslip, Lady's Bedstraw, Common Milkwort, Salad Burnet, Field Scabious, Yellow-wort and Fragrant Orchid.
In the southern site grassland plants include Southern Marsh-orchid, Bee Orchid, Common Fleabane, Field Scabious and parasitic Knapweed Broomrape.
It differs from other similar species in that it has 4 lobed flowers, whereas Small Scabious and Field scabious have 5 lobes and hence it has been placed in a separate genus in the same family.
The larvae feed on devil's-bit scabious (Succisa pratensis) and field scabious (Knautia arvensis).
The larvae feed on Dipsacus, Scabiosa, Cephalaria and Knautia species (including Knautia arvensis).
Simonič also suggests that the name could be derived from the plant field scabious (Knautia arvensis), known as grintavec in Slovene and Grindkraut in German.
Bluebuttons, Gypsy's-Rose, Knautia arvensis, Scabieuses des Champs, Scabiosa arvensis.
Field Scabious (Knautia arvensis) The flowers and leaves of this herb were made into ointments for various skin disorders including gangrene, sores, and ulcers, as well as dandruff.
Andrena hattorfiana is an oligolectic species, feeding its young only on pollen of a few species of Dipsacaceae (Knautia arvensis, Scabiosa columbaria, Centaurea species).
The main food plant of the Marsh Fritillary is the Devil's bit scabious, Succisa pratensis, but can also include the field scabious Knautia arvensis and the small scabious Scabiosa columbaria.