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Sedge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sedge may refer to: • Any of the plants in the family Cyperaceae • Sweet Flag, a species of plant in the Araceae family • Yellow flag iris ( Iris pseudacorus ), a species of plant in the Iridaceae ...
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Cyperaceae - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Liversedge F.C. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liversedge F.C. are a football club based near Cleckheaton, England, on the border with Hightown in Liversedge and members of the Northern Counties East Football League Premier Division for the 2009–...
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Sedge is the Indiana Jones of public radio, taking us on radio adventures from Alaska Tlingit longhouses to Edinburgh yurts and the Ashland Shakespeare Festival, says Craig Chaquico, renowned guitarist and humanitarian, about West Coast Live.
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Easy Lawns: Low-Maintenance Native Grasses for Gardeners Everywhere ... Sedge Lawns for Every Landscape ... Few breakthroughs in the history of turf have been as significant as the arrival of an entirely new kind of lawn—the sedge lawn. Sedges are close botanical cousins of the grasses and look a lot like them.
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Shows navigation between all of the Skye Thomas and Tomorrow's Edge websites. ... Soulmates and Romantic Relationships; Parenting and Family Dynamics; Personal Growth and Self-Empowerment; Self-Confidence and Self-Esteem ; Spirituality and Universal Truths; Angels, Fairies, and Spirit Guides; ... Astrology and Horoscopes;
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Bulbostylis capillaris. This sedge is commonly only about 6-9 cm tall and has very small brownish spikelets. ... Carex sp., sedge. Note the grasslike leaves. This genus has unisexual flowers. Staminate flowers are found in the axils of purplish bracts in the upper spikelets and pistillate flowers occur in the lower spikelets.
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Of the more than 40 sedge species found in North Carolina landscapes, we are most concerned about the two perennial nutsedges: yellow nutsedge (Cyperus esculentus) (Figure 1) and purple nutsedge (Cyperus rotundus) (Figure 2). Both nutsedges are sometimes called nutgrass.
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