10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CANKERY»
Discover the use of
cankery in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
cankery and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit-Trees ... ...
I. AN old cankery Apple-tree, headed down four years ago, now bearing great
plenty of fine fruit. a. Where it was first headed down. b and r. Two wounds
covered with the Composition, and now nearly silled up with sound wood. The
part of the ...
William FORSYTH (of Kensington, the Elder.), 1810
2
A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit-trees: In ...
t Fig' I' 3 ~' “'17:: 2.1113— 4 AN old cankery Apple-tree, headed downfour years
ago, n0w bearing great plenty of'fine'fruit. ' a. Where wasfirst headed a b. and 0.
Two wounds covered~ "ith'"tlie Composition, and now nearly ' up“ witth s'diind ...
3
An Epitome of Mr. Forsyth's Treatise on the Culture and ...
Also, Notes on American Gardening and Fruits ... and Further, of Economical
Principles in Building Farmers' Habitations William Forsyth, William Cobbett.
EXPLANATION OF PLATE VI. Fig. 1. An old cankery apple-tree headed down
four yeart ...
William Forsyth, William Cobbett, 1804
4
A Treatise on the Culture and Management of Fruit-Trees: In ...
I. AN old cankery Apple-tree headed down four years ago, now bearing great
plenty of fine fruit. a. Where it was first headed down. b and e. Two wounds
covered with the Composition, and now nearly filled up with sound wood. The
part of the ...
5
The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia: The Century ...
cankery. cankery (kang'ker-i), a. [< canker + -y1.] 1. Cankered; corroded; rusty. —
2. Ill-natured; crabbed; venomous; vexing: as, "O cankrie care," Burns. canking (
kang'king), p. a. [Ppr. of cank1, p.] Whining; dissatisfied. [Prov. Eng. (Derbyshire).]
...
6
A New Universal Etymological, Technological, and Pronouncing ...
l. ' CANELLA—CANKERY. CAIELLA, ka-nel'la, 1. (Dim. of coma, a reed, Lat. from
the rolled up form of its bark.) A genus of plants: Order, Guttifere. ' CANESCENT,
ka-nes'seut, a. (from cunesco, I grow " hoary, Lat.) Growing white or hoary ...
7
Lloyd's Encyclopaedic Dictionary: A New and Original Work of ...
cankery—. cannon. 39 can kcr y, * can -Ury, a. [Eng. canker ;-y.] I. Lit.: Of the
nature of or resembling а canker. IL Figuratively: 1. Worn, eaten away, as though
bya canker. "It 'the Mît.] had the [limn юнгк of aça, the Ink beuijf turned brown and
...
8
Everyman his own Gardener ... By Thomas Mawe, and J. ...
Mix fresh cow-dung with urine and soap-suds, and with this mixture wash over
the stems and branches of the trees, as a whitewasher would wash the ceiling or
walls of a room ; taking care to cut off all the cankery parts, and to scrape off all
the ...
John ABERCROMBIE (Horticulturist.), George GLENNY (the Elder.), William GOWANS, 1857
9
London Medical Gazette: Or, Journal of Practical Medicine
On the sixth day, oedema of the feet, legs, and thighs, came on, and the urine
was scanty, high- coloured, and offensive : water flowed from the mouth, which "
had a cankery taste." On 15th March, she gave birth to a very small infant, which
only ...
10
Papers on Agriculture, Consisting of Communications Made to ...
Mix fresh cow dung with urine and soap suds, and with this mixture wash over
thestems and branches of the.trees,as a white washer would wash the cieling or
walls of a room; taking care to cut oss all cankery parts,.and to scrape off all the ...