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What a position for a Roundhead general to find himself in!
A post office has been in operation at Roundhead since 1837.
Our Roundhead was well battered and wouldn't be able to fight again for at least two months.
The new governor and the garrison will be entirely Roundhead!
He's got a scientific name, but it just means Martian roundhead.
Tarvin remained in Roundhead hands until the end of the war.
We are unable to account for the human interval," the man named Roundhead was saying. "
Winchester himself was captured by Roundhead while trying to reach his men.
The word roundhead or roundheads may refer to any of several things.
But there's not much special about him," Roundhead said, "except that he is the oldest of us bright ones who are here present.
"That's the whole idea behind our support for this business," says Chief Roundhead.
He said that either the old Roundhead Clarke or his son would go with him.
Then we remove the structure by deflation," Roundhead said. "
The Roundhead infantry must be no more than fifty yards down the shore.
She defied the Roundhead fashion of covering her hair in a scarf.
Gouging damage to the church door can be seen and is said to have been caused in an attack by Roundhead troops.
So you don't know yourself what you want," said roundhead. "
The mushroom is commonly known as the blue roundhead.
Coogan, he tells me, calls him the roundhead to his cavalier.
Why, that his hair is still growing out.He was a Roundhead!
Beyond them the Roundhead infantry was collecting its own dead, among them the man he himself had killed.
The Roundhead infantry probably has mostly matchlocks, and they'll be wet.
The land was given to a Roundhead soldier.
The goal of the Roundhead party was to give the Parliament supreme control over executive administration.
However, collections of Stropharia often show characteristics that are intermediate between two or more species, making them difficult to identify accurately.
Common names for the mushroom include luxuriant ringstalk and lacerated stropharia.
There are a few greenish Stropharia with which S. caerulea might be confused.
Unlike many other members of the genus Stropharia, it is widely regarded as a choice edible and cultivated for food.
They are characteristic of the genus Stropharia.
Yields of Stropharia (220 g/kg) are higher and more regular than those obtained on conventional substrate (straw).
Described as very tasty by some authors, king stropharia is easily cultivated on a medium similar to that on which it grows naturally.
The genus Stropharia is mainly a medium to large agaric with a distinct membranous annulus.
We grow Stropharia around the base of a coppiced eucalyptus in the garden and they'll grow well around any tree or bush.
Stropharia had been divided into 'sections' by Rolf Singer among others, although some 'sections' were only informally named.
It includes several formerly described, variously, from the genera Stropharia, Hypholoma, and Weraroa.
The most common fungi to be found in these gardens are Stropharia aurantiaca, which is easily identified by its bright red cap, and the large numbers that appear.
Paul Kummer (not Quélet, who merely excluded Stropharia) was the first to elevate the tribe to a genus.
In mycology, acanthocyte refers to stellate cells found on the hyphae of fungi of the genus Stropharia.
Phylogenetically, Protostropharia is distinct from Stropharia, Pholiota, and Leratiomyces.
French mycologist Lucien Quélet gave it its most commonly used name in 1872 when he transferred it to Stropharia.
The genus Stropharia (sometimes known by the common name roundheads) is a group of medium to large agarics with a distinct membranous ring on the stipe.
Because of the enzymatic make-up of Stropharia, a cultivated and edible mushroom, it is capable of using agricultural wastes as substrates for growth.
Stropharia albonitens is a mushroom found in grassy fields, lawns, and frequently along roadsides in North America and Europe.
"Stropharia, Leratiomyces & Psilocybe" by Michael Kuo, MushroomExpert.com, 2008.
The name Protostropharia refers to the less anatomically complex astrocystidia (Greek proto-) as compared to the acanthocytes in Stropharia.
Tuomikoski called this lookalike Stropharia cyanea, a name he based on James Bolton's 1820 taxon Agaricus cyaneus.
Members of the core clade of Stropharia are characterized by crystalline acanthocytes among the hyphae that make up the rhizoids at the base of the mushroom.
Protostropharia semiglobata, commonly known as the dung roundhead, the halfglobe mushroom, or the hemispheric stropharia, is an agaric fungus of the family Strophariaceae.
In Paul Stamets' book Mycelium Running, a study done by Christiane Pischl showed that the king stropharia makes an excellent garden companion to corn.