Hattie Bernstein,, 5 July 2018 Early-blooming wildflowers called spring ephemerals – such as spring beauty, yellow trout lily, marsh marigold, and more – pop up in fields and woods across Northeast Ohio during early spring.Ĭ, Spring ephemerals bloom before tree leaves block the sunlight from reaching the forest floor.Ĭ, Like all spring ephemerals, the clock is always ticking for the wood anemone.ĭave Taft, New York Times, 26 Apr. 2022 There isn’t a growing season for native plants, although ephemerals bloom and die in a few days and others flower even when there’s snow on the ground. Zayna Syed, The Arizona Republic, Recent Examples on the Web: Noun The plant grows in clumps and is a spring ephemeral-producing leaves and flowers for about a month, then going dormant for the rest of the year.Īrkansas Online, 28 Mar. John Dobosz, Forbes, And in August 2021, a district court ruled that the Trump ephemeral streams regulation suffered from fundamental flaws and therefore had to be thrown out. Joshua Hawkins, BGR, There’s reason to believe Tyson could launch at least an ephemeral rally after the beating it’s taken in the past month. Jura Koncius, Washington Post, 15 June 2022 At times, Kavachi has even created ephemeral islands due to its eruptions. Nicole Gull Mcelroy, Fortune, 16 June 2022 This can be a go-to formula for creating design that will be lasting and not too ephemeral.
Judith Thurman, The New Yorker, 20 June 2022 Gary Hamel, cofounder of the Management Lab and coauthor of Humanocracy, argues that there are certain ephemeral qualities to leadership that simply can’t be taught. New York Times, 22 June 2022 Le Chevalier’s manuscript-written in (eccentric) French, the lingua franca of diplomacy, one of his ephemeral métiers-has its own picaresque history. Recent Examples on the Web: Adjective At a time when most fashion trends have gotten more ephemeral and less universal because of constant product churn, some manage to achieve the opposite: a ubiquity that feels disconnected from perceptible demand.Īmanda Mull, The Atlantic, 23 June 2022 Perhaps part of the beauty is the loss the flowers suggest an ephemeral grace.