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We were in front of the Citrons' house now, two away from mine.
In fact, this work is still principally about those citrons.
The Citrons, who travel often, are planning another trip.
Citrons used for ritual purposes cannot be grown by grafting branches.
One day, looking through a hole, she saw a garden filled with lemons, flowers, citrons, and vines.
Some citrons have medium-sized oil bubbles at the outer surface, medially distant to each other.
The prince saw the citrons, took them to his room, and dealt with them as the last three, getting back his bride.
The sweet varieties include the Corsican and Moroccan citrons.
Its exports include timber, citrons, skins, chestnuts and gallic acid.
He brought out a square-cut emerald as big as his thumbnail, flanked by citrons and set in gold.
The writer was overwhelmed when he saw the citrons (baggy, nubbly cousins of lemons) in the picture, years ago.
New Peugeots and Citrons flood crowded highways and streets.
At the Buddha's midriff there rises an altar with a burner containing peaches, citrons and lotus flowers.
You pay eighty marks and they plant a dunam of land for you with olives, oranges, almonds or citrons.
(Grafted citrons are not kosher for ritual use on Sukkot, according to halachah.)
As in many regions of Greece, viticulture and olive groves are significant; oranges and citrons are also cultivated.
The sun shone in cloudless azure, the air was balmy with the scent of orange trees, of pomegranates and citrons.
Shamuti oranges were the major crop, but citrons, lemons and mandarin oranges were also grown.
The dry garden patch smelled of drying vines and was strewn with yellow seed-cucumbers and pumpkins and citrons.
The label is mostly in Korean, but bears a picture of citrons, and there is a sticker on the back that says "citron tea."
At times, she had copied over his correspondence, or made his favorite confections from the lemons and chartreuse citrons he sent her from his garden.
All breakfast melons, like cantaloupes, citrons, nutmegs, Cassabas, and honeydews, are varieties of the muskmelon.
Here grow, on different terraces, kept up by great walls, probably ancient, fruit-trees of all kinds, such as citrons, oranges, pomegranates, figs, quinces, and mulberries.
On his second voyage in 1493, Christopher Columbus took seeds of oranges, lemons and citrons to Haiti and the Caribbean.
Schraga Schlomai about Yemenite citrons.