There are two types of weeds - annual and perennial. They're both troublesome. Annuals are a nuisance because they're designed to grow as fast as possible and complete their life-scale in one year. Sometimes, they can grow from seed, flower, produce seed and go on doing this several times in just one season. They can flower when they're small, too - less than an inch high, sometimes. So you want to get rid of annual weeds as soon as you spot their seedlings.
Perennial weeds are also a big nuisance. Often, they have long tap roots or root systems that cover several square feet, and they just keep on going, sending up shoots over large areas. You want to get rid of these, too.
Because the early season weeds rob the most yield from the crop. When the crop is nearly mature, the weeds are really just more of a harvest nuisance.
most of the time nuisance weed/pot/ganja/marijuana/dubidge/etc. is the crap weed, and you don't want that, its a nuisance, like a pain in the a$$ like you gotta clean and scrape the seeds out your self like reddgie and cat pi$$ and all that cheap crap, idfk about noxious but its prolly the good weed bruthaaa, now me we just say the name then dank or not dank like (Grape ape, dank) or (coronan crack, not dank) and so on :P safe weed is good weed in my opinion all home grown crap hurr c:
An unwanted plant is typically referred to as a weed. Weeds are plants that grow where they are not wanted, competing with desired plants for nutrients, water, and sunlight. They are often perceived as a nuisance in gardens, lawns, and agricultural fields.
Nuisance is a noun.
No, "nuisance" is a noun that refers to something or someone that is annoying or bothersome.
The plural form of the noun nuisance is nuisances.
2 syllables are in the word nuisance. :)
The Nuisance was created in 1921-01.
Yes, weeds have bark if they're nuisance shrubs, trees or woody vines. Bark refers to the outer covering of roots and stems in woody plants such as woody vines, trees and shrubs. Weeds refer to plants that grow where they aren't wanted or to plants whose usefulness is unknown or negated by their harmfulness. Therefore, a weed has bark when it's a question of a shrub, tree or woody vine growing where you don't want it or where it's causing harm to the environment.
Computer problems are a nuisance for many companies. The little boy was being a nuisance to his brother.
The sentence is so informal that grammatical categorization runs screaming from it. Formally we say "The issue is whether it is a nuisance." Recording informal speech we write "The issue is: Is it a nuisance?"
Commit No Nuisance was created in 2002.