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213 results
  1. ... Ph.; Mure, Codex Med.). The juice of the Black Mulberry, Morus nigra Linn. ; Order, Urticacea. Several species of Mulberry are in cultivation, generally as food for silk worms, which devour the leaves. The above, with a dark black- berry-like cluster of pleasantly acidulous drupes, origin- ...
  2. NLM Digital Collections - An introduction to entomology 
    Publication: Ithaca, N.Y., The Comstock Publishing Co., 1924
    ... of which there are several varieties, and the black mulberry (Marus nigra); the former is the better. I The leaves of osage orange (Madura aurantiaca) have also been used as silk-worm food ... The newly-hatched larva is black or dark- gray, and is covered with long ...
  3. NLM Digital Collections - The history of South-Carolina, from its first settlement in 1670, to the year 1808: in two ... 
    Publication: Charleston [S.C.] : Published by David Longworth, for the author, 1809
    ... by infusion in brandy, is a rich cordial. Black mulberry, morus nigra—its Avood makes furniture, and the fruit is ...
  4. ... of this order. Various species of Nettle (Urtica,) Black Mulberry, (Morus nigra-,) and some species of Buckthorn (Rhamnus,) belong to ...
  5. ... as the thirty-second parallel of latitude.—The black mulberry (M. nigra) is a tree about as large as the ...
  6. ... tree. Ficus carica, Lin. Contrayerva. Dorstenia contrayerva, Lin. Black mulberry tree. Morus nigra, Lin. Wall pellitory. Parietaria officinalis, Lin. Hemp. Cannabis ...
  7. ... maialis. Mugwort, Artemisia vulgaris. Mulalre, Mulatto. / Mulberry tree, Morus nigra. Muliebria, Vulva. Mullein, black, Verbascum nigrum—m. Broad leaved, great, Verbascum nigrum— ...
  8. ... white ash; fraxinus sambucifolia, or black ash; juglans nigra, or black walnut; diospyros Virgini- ana, or persimmon; serpentaria Virginiana, or snake-root; prunus Virginiana, or wild cherry; morus rubra, or red mulberry; nepeta cataria, or catnip; ...
  9. NLM Digital Collections - The domestic encyclopaedia : or, A dictionary of facts, and useful knowledge: comprehending a ... 
    Publication: Philadelphia : Published by William Young Birch, and Abraham Small, no. 17, South Second-Street : and T. & J. Swords, New-York ; Robert Carr, printer, 1803[-1804]
    ... exotics, comprising seven species, of which only the nigra, or Common Mulberry-tree, is cultivated in Britain, on account of its black fruit. It is propagated both by layers, and ...
  10. ... former are white by law, and consequently free. MULBERRY TREE, Morns nigra. MULES, (F.) Mula. Chilblains on the heels. MULIEBRIA, Vulva. MULLEIN, BLACK, Verbascum nigrum— m. Broad-leaved, great, Verbascum nigrum— ...
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