「WOOL」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| Further, the act increased the tariff on carpet | wool, a wool of very low quality that is not produce |
| It has medium length | wool, a polled head, and a well-muscled body. |
| The major industries in the area are | wool, agriculture (especially bananas and tomatoes) |
| Marsh's next novel Died in the | Wool also concerns Alleyn's counterespionage work in |
| is stronger and eight times warmer than sheep's | wool, and softer than cashmere wool. |
| that is naturally hornless, with cream-colored | wool and a cinnamon-red face and legs. |
| Both mineral | wool and fibreglass are used in autoclaves. |
| nantly polled sheep with long, soft, quite fine | wool and produce good meat carcases. |
| He wanted its central concern to be | wool and materials for its exhibits to be collected |
| ntiffs offering to sell them certain fleeces of | wool and requiring an answer in the course of post. |
| The filter is made from aluminium, | wool and aluminium foil (in a number of layers) with |
| It is a | wool and beef producing area. |
| He was a | wool and beef farmer before entering politics. |
| ly wealthy family who had made their fortune in | wool and were busy transforming themselves into the |
| They are a dual-purpose breed ( | wool and meat). |
| impart a red colour to fabrics such as calico, | wool, and silk. |
| This led to his making a study of | wool and he became an expert in its technology. |
| Most of the people raise sheep for its meat and | wool; and other animals like cows (moo), pigs(oink), |
| The textiles were made from | wool and cotton. |
| escribed as a dual-purpose breed, with superior | wool and near-mutton breed characteristics. |
| Major industries in the area are | wool and grazing. |
| ty had become one of the state's leaders in the | wool and mohair industry. |
| The Lonk is raised for carpet | wool and for meat. |
| objects that often use spruce root, cedar bark, | wool, and natural dyes. |
| Sheep farms, producing | wool and mutton, were an important business. |
| and 1891), he invested in steam-powered cotton, | wool and flour mills and pioneered steam ferry trans |
| al al Akhdar, including cereals, dates, olives, | wool, and meat. |
| ural dye for clothing and fabrics, particularly | wool, and as ink. |
| fter designs by David Teniers the Younger, this | wool and silk tapestry was probably made for the upp |
| ed in the late 1800s, and timber, horticulture, | wool and other farming sustained the region. |
| e land into a productive farm, producing wheat, | wool and dairy products. |
| f the aforementioned cream or paste or of steel | wool and non woven scouring pads which holds fine gr |
| It is a | wool and cotton growing area. |
| Beer, salt, honey, | wool and flour were exported, while merchants import |
| s a, frequently brightly coloured, structure of | wool and bristle at the growing tip of certain cacti |
| Because European produced stone | wool and glass wool is bio soluble, R39 and R40 do n |
| illage which is situated about half way between | Wool and Wareham in Dorset, England. |
| r year to the State's economy, are dominated by | wool and sheep, and also include timber, grain, fore |
| althiest in the country were reduced to selling | wool and eggs. |
| Although imported into Britain and applied to | wool and cotton, the dye did not find commercial suc |
| At its centre, a shield shows a sack of | wool and a cotton plant, representing the local wool |
| It is usually rubbed with steel | wool and then wiped with rubbing alcohol to keep it |
| Tunisia exported olive oil, wax, leather, | wool and derivatives, and imported wheat in famine y |
| In the past watermills were used for fulling | wool and grinding corn. |
| sult that there was a head-on collision between | Wool and Wareham on 27 September 1847; casualties we |
| They are mainly raised for | wool and meat production especially when crossed wit |
| ese certainties greatly aided English export of | wool, and thus Henry VII's treasury. |
| ona is a traditional Asturian hat, made of dark | wool and worn by men. |
| r appearance, with flattened green pads bearing | wool and spines. |
| west Africa, to discharge Tuscaloosa's cargo of | wool and goat skins. |
| hemical substance of natural origin (from sheep | wool), and a main ingredient of the popular cosmetic |
| The Brillenschaf grows coarse | wool and is raised primarily for meat. |
| British commodities, especially iron products, | wool and cotton textiles, and agricultural goods. |
| variety of industrial advances, particularly in | wool and coal. |
| ith England had traditionally been good, due to | wool and textile trade. |
| It was made of | wool and was already seen as symbolic of the duties |
| a practical garment, made of heavy plain black | wool and designed to provide warmth in cold weather. |
| was established in July 1836 by General John E. | Wool and a force of Tennessee volunteer militia sent |
| mical composition of sheep milk, and quality of | wool and meat. |
| founded in 1894 as a seaport for sending wheat, | wool and furs to France, Germany and other European |
| e principal products from the Gridley area were | wool and sheep. |
| ddish bracts strung densely with cobwebby white | wool and bearing bright yellow flowers. |
| ved to eat Willows, and together, they defeated | Wool and brought back the willows. |
| edieval damasks were usually woven in silk, but | wool and linen damasks were also woven. |
| Metohian sheep is a multi-purpose (milk, meat, | wool and research) breed of domesticated sheep in Me |
| len Brady to release tracks from Das Shadow, DJ | Wool and new signing Broad Bean Band. |
| The breed is noted for its very fine, soft | wool and the high quality of its meat, though its sm |
| The | wool and small size make these pigs very well adapte |
| It is characterized by a dark brown | wool and usually having four or occasionally six hor |
| The shirt was made of coarse | wool and was a pullover style with 3 buttons. |
| ovides an outlet for Bolivian copper, some tin, | wool and other products and an inlet for much of the |
| known as Bakewell Hall) was the centre for the | wool and cloth trade in England from mediaeval times |
| ac, a scarlet substance that is used for dyeing | wool and silk, as a cosmetic, and as a medicinal dru |
| The new tariff provisions for | wool and woolen goods were exceedingly protectionist |
| which occurs when flies lay eggs in warm, damp | wool and the fly larvae grow and eat into the sheep. |
| Sometimes the wax looks like cotton | wool and oozes drops of fluid. |
| He has since accepted to inform | Wool and Cashmere of Tabby's whereabouts, as well as |
| as a cheese maker, tavern keeper, and dealer in | wool and wine. |
| is considerable, exports being fruit, carpets, | wool, and skins; imports, cotton and piece goods, me |
| graze the merino sheep that produce a renowned | wool and whose milk yields a well known cheese denom |
| m/gallery called Thomas's Shop where there is a | wool and weaving exhibition and workshop. |
| In 1945, an overcoat ( | wool and fully lined) 18 coupons; a man's suit 26-29 |
| The soft | wool and the unusual colors of the CVM are especiall |
| hrived in the postwar years on the back of high | wool and wheat prices. |
| rticular, it served as a centre for the sale of | wool and cloth. |
| The Exposition's general counsel T. J. | Wool and Major Hunter were both present. |
| Rice, tea, potatoes, opium, spices, | wool and honey are the chief exports. |
| mportant branches of national commerce, such as | Wool and Leather.” |
| The legs are free of | wool and are mottled black and white. |
| pagan rituals, often involving the use of hair, | wool and feces.* |
| ens, a few hours later, Marina and Telegin wind | wool and discuss the planned departure of Serebryako |
| ent Acts of Parliament forbidding the export of | wool and yarn, as 'burthensome'. |
| The breed has coarse to medium | wool and is polled (hornless). |
| The collection and sale of | wool and the manufacture of cloth continued to be th |
| Sometimes the price of | wool and sheep fell very low and it was impossible t |
| try, depending for its prosperity on its grain, | wool and the mohair obtained from the beautiful Ango |
| ly, the organisation was a trade association of | wool and cloth merchants. |
| They were most often made of | wool, and were easily worn during long marches. |
| ive tariffs for a number of products, including | wool and cotton textiles. |
| It is used for its carpet quality | wool and meat production. |
| Sheep - studs, | wool and meat industry; |
| Prince, Richard Serra, Keith Tyson, Christopher | Wool, Andy Warhol, Marcel Duchamp, Hans Bellmer and |
| Processing | wool appears to have been the main industry and stre |
| Shawls made from Pashmina | wool are considered some of the world's finest, and |
| However, Rip Raps and Fort | Wool are accessible to the public only by water via |
| blends, but other materials such as cotton and | wool are used as well. |
| Weymouth, Dorchester and | Wool are accessible via small country B roads. |
| featured resource industries such as Australian | wool, Argentine ranching, East African diamond minin |
| e sheep on his property and market the coloured | wool as a naturally occurring phenomenon. |
| hat importers were not declaring higher quality | wool as carpet wool to evade the tariff. |
| of politicians and cites 'Great cry and little | wool' as a parallel English proverb that fits the si |
| sheep, bred not only for meat but for milk and | wool as well. |
| arden iron and steel, in electroplating, dyeing | wool, as a laboratory reagent, and as a mild oxidizi |
| oucestershire, England, he had to work spinning | wool as a child and received no education. |
| t since the 1770s cotton manufacture superseded | wool as the principal business, with associated mino |
| In 1832, Scott replaced John E. | Wool as commander of Federal troops in the Cherokee |
| osperous and to have traded in corn (grain) and | wool as well as banking. |
| The British woollen mills were desperate for | wool at the time because of the Napoleonic blockade, |
| ver, in Cork, trett was deducted after tare for | wool at the rate of 8 pounds per 20 stone (280 pound |
| features an antique truck loaded with imitation | wool bales, a windmill, and several sculptures of sh |
| d 'Splat attack!' (smashing paint soaked cotton | wool balls on pieces of paper with fly swatters). |
| extended from the dock past a high timber-faced | wool bank to beyond the George Street crossing. |
| iety from clerks and engineers to merchants and | wool barons. |
| Generally, | wool batts have thicknesses of 50 mm (2 in) to 100mm |
| he walls were built with a paste made of cotton | wool, bee honey and extracted and purified white cla |
| Fine | wool, beef cattle and prime lambs sustain the local |
| Major industries in the shire include | wool, beef, opals, oil and natural gas. |
| erected in the 14th century for the storage of | wool before export to the continent in the galleys a |
| building yard lain northwest and in the cotton | wool before country numerous rockets with ceilings f |
| ect ears with white face and legs and a ruff of | wool behind the ears. |
| fects permeated throughout society, with 2/3 of | wool being produced by peasants who must have suffer |
| re the government to check the illicit trade in | wool between Ireland and France; to regulate the pap |
| n Bovington Heath to the west of the village of | Wool between the A352 road and the London Waterloo t |
| rols, extra-large pillows, eye-shades, and pure | wool blankets are also offered. |
| (8 lb) of fleece which is used in manufacturing | wool blankets and carpets. |
| ior Scholarship in Agriculture (declined), a NZ | Wool Board Scholarship and a Shell Oil Company Schol |
| ns Board, Maori Trust Board and the New Zealand | Wool Board (of which he was foundation chairman). |
| The New Zealand | Wool Boom of 1951 was one of the greatest economic b |
| This led to the greatest | wool boom in New Zealand's history, with prices trip |
| It is a carpet | wool breed raised primarily for its wool. |
| The Damani is a thin tail, meat and | wool breed which is found in the Dera Ismail Khan di |
| It is a carpet | wool breed used for meat production and belongs to t |
| They are a carpet | wool breed used for both meat and dairy production. |
| A dual-purpose (meat and | wool) breed with a major emphasis on wool production |
| Although this is a medium-coarse | wool breed, they are raised primarily for their meat |
| being a highly prolific, dual-purpose (meat and | wool) breed. |
| ot continue with the workload assocatiated with | wool breeds. |
| carrying sulphur, fertiliser, petrol and cotton | wool broke loose from their siding at Abu Muslim Sta |
| , a monkey, masks with and without hair, cotton | wool, burning newspapers, etc. |
| He engaged in banking and in the | wool business in New York City and later in banking |
| He was active in his family's | wool business, but turned his attention to something |
| eed" - Slight seed contamination visible in the | wool but minimal mainly concentrated in the belly re |
| This breed grows | wool but is primarily raised for meat. |
| ey are ‘dual purpose' - bred not just for their | wool, but also for the fact that they are prolific s |
| The breed is well known for its | wool, but also for its meat, both lamb and mutton. |
| otus recounts that early Egyptians did not wear | wool, but some scholars argue that it was meant only |
| n the past the scapular was required to be 100% | wool but this is no longer required; the habits of t |
| The face is generally free of | wool, but some sheep have a top knot of short wool. |
| This breed is prized for its | wool but bred primarily for meat. |
| Watson had been a successful | wool buyer, but quit the business in 1907 to attend |
| Their intent was to deal cooperatively with | wool buyers to regularize pricing and avoid wide swi |
| mas Andrew Polson, Tuam agent for Bradford city | wool buyers. |
| western New South Wales using it to send their | wool by shallow-draft paddle steamer from busy river |
| ntre and outer Newton,Matly and Harrop Edge.Its | Wool came off the farms off Matly Lane.The cotton ca |
| Although the | wool can be obtained without killing the animal, poa |
| Anthidium manicatum, common name European | wool carder bee, is a species of bee in the family M |
| my and horse blankets, bed blankets, and custom | wool carding". |
| lucifer match and revolutionised the process of | wool carding. |
| They also performed custom | wool carding. |
| R. is signed, under which Afghanistan exchanges | wool, casings, skins, and herbs against textiles, sa |
| t included the mining town of Brighouse and the | wool centre of Elland. |
| A | wool church is an English church built primarily fro |
| Wool churches are common in the Cotswolds and in Eas | |
| an apprentice plumber in 1956, a roustabout and | wool classer from 1956 to 1959, a contract harvester |
| production of chemical dye and in scouring the | wool clean. |
| The average annual | wool clip is 3 kg (6 lb) of medium wool this is appr |
| , which charts the voyage taken by 19th century | wool clippers returning from Australia, Chichester s |
| The | wool clips were larger and the wool length had incre |
| ct 1878, the Factory and Workshop Act 1883, the | Wool Cloth Factories Act 1889, the Factory and Works |
| most varying occupations; they traded in grain, | wool, cloth, and even, under Muslim rule, in slaves. |
| Groenewold Fur & | Wool Co. |
| iman visited Versailles, but only wore a simple | wool coat and refused to bow to Louis XIV. Louis XIV |
| awkins, Glenn Brown, Andrea Zittel, Christopher | Wool, Collier Schorr, Harmony Korine, Douglas Hueble |
| Wool colour and coarseness prevents Swaledale wool f | |
| the newly interred Gonfaloniere of Justice, the | wool comber Michele di Lando, a privilege later remo |
| en succeeded Owen Dixon as chair of the Central | Wool Committee, and in 1945 was the Australian deleg |
| It was manufactured by the New York Lead | Wool Company in the United States and by The Lead Wo |
| The Lead | Wool Company (the British company) was incorporated |
| Its | wool consists of a protective topcoat and soft under |
| Lead | wool consists of thin strands of lead metal that can |
| received financial support from the Australian | Wool Corporation until 1986. |
| at was ideally suited to the development of the | wool, cotton and linen industries. |
| Clothing rationing points could be used for | wool, cotton and household textiles. |
| cow, pursuant to which Afghanistan is to export | wool, cotton, dried and fresh fruits, and oilseeds i |
| f Staffordshire's history, embroidered in silk, | wool, cotton, metallic thread and leather, one panel |
| During the war period 1914 - 1918 he was on the | Wool Council. |
| The export price of | wool crashed by 40% in 1966, however New Zealand's s |
| nd as a justice dealing with crimes against the | wool customs. |
| "Off floor" you took your chance on the | wool delivered being up to sample; all "on floor" de |
| wool density(cm2) 2 199 ± 57 | |
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