flower-bed

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See also: flower bed and flowerbed

English[edit]

Noun[edit]

flower-bed (plural flower-beds)

  1. Alternative form of flowerbed.
    • 1842, [Katherine] Thomson, chapter XIX, in Widows and Widowers. A Romance of Real Life., volume III, London: Richard Bentley, [], →OCLC, page 331:
      I have a great notion that he lived in the Isle of Wight, somewhere near Brading, in a thatched cottage, half-covered with myrtles, and with such flower-beds in front!
    • 1880, Percy Greg, Across the Zodiac[1]:
      One field was bare, its surface of an ochreish colour deeper than that of clay, broken and smoothed as perfectly as the surface of the most carefully tended flower-bed.
    • 1911, Joseph Conrad, Under Western Eyes[2]:
      He stopped short and looked at the brick wall of the terrace, faced with shallow arches, meagrely clothed by a few unthriving creepers, with an ill-kept narrow flower-bed along its foot.
    • 1952, Norman Lewis, Golden Earth:
      We stopped for a moment at the golf course to chat with members of the Consular staff, and then drove on to the Consulate, which was set upon an eminence, above evidences of landscape-gardening; a sweep of lawns, with coarse, whitened grass; flower-beds in which larkspur and nasturtiums fought against desperate odds.