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Перевод: pine
[прилагательное] сосновый; хвойный; [существительное] сосна [бот.] ; ананас ; ручная граната; лимонка ; [глагол] чахнуть; томиться; изнывать; иссыхать; изнемогать; жаждать; тосковать; стосковаться
Тезаурус:
- Thee will not think I talk figuratively when I tell thee that his pine apple stove is sixty feet long, twenty feet wide and height proportionable.
- The right fork ran through pine forest well below the level of the meadow before climbing to meet the quarry track, which ran in a slight curve following the concave face of the mountain.
- She used the noise as camouflage for what she felt to be her betrayal of her grandfather's trust: "He's up at Pine Ridge."
- (Everyone in Cornwall who supported King Charles planted a Scots pine outside his house as a sign of welcoming like-minded passers-by who might be in need of protection.
- All around Kitzbuhel, verdant slopes of dainty meadows decked with mountain daisies meet calm pine forests and towering alpine peaks.
- It is here, where the azaleas bloom in a sort of pinky and purply show, that the cheers of the crowds ahead echo through the pine woods to put further stress on the leaders.
- Trent braked and swung the BMW back into the shelter of the pine trees.
- Bartram then told Miller about his method of collecting specimens of pines; when they are in flower and the young cone just impregnated, and asked whether European pines set their cones on the same spring's shoot, "or the second year's wood, as by your draught, the Scotch Pine doth?"
- Any type of wood can be waxed, although it is usually applied to pine or oak.
- The President was a keen fisherman and Trent guessed that he hunted - despite the Pine Ridge being a Nature Reserve.
- Whether the parents planted a cedar tree in honour of the occasion, as another custom dictated (girls only got a pine tree!) we do not know, but we can rest assured that the salutation-prayer was made with particular relish for this first son of a first son: "A boy is born into the world; a blessing has come into the world."
- Once again I acknowledge Anderson (op. cit.) for the following: - "Geikie (1894) states that in Lewis, fully-grown oak, alder, birch and especially Scotch fir, had been found in the bogs and MacCulloch (1824) in respect of the peat in North Uist, includes oak with pine, alder and birch amongst the trees most frequently found".
- " I'll not leave thee, thou lone one, to pine on the stem,
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