honey plantとは 意味・読み方・使い方
追加できません
(登録数上限)
意味・対訳 蜜源植物
「honey plant」の部分一致の例文検索結果
該当件数 : 9件
a plant that furnishes nectar suitable for making honey発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
蜂蜜を作るのに適した花蜜を出す植物 - 日本語WordNet
METHOD FOR TOGETHER PROCESSING HONEY WITH PLANT SEEDS例文帳に追加
はちみつと植物性種子類とを一緒にする加工方法。 - 特許庁
APICULTURE METHOD FOR COLLECTING HONEY FROM ARTIFICIALLY CULTIVATED PLANT例文帳に追加
人工栽培による植物からハチミツを採取する養蜂方法 - 特許庁
To provide a method for together processing honey with plant seeds, by which the honey is processed in a state capable of being easily mixed without causing hardening, crystallization and separation.例文帳に追加
この発明は、はちみつと植物性種子類を一緒にする加工方法で、はちみつが硬化・結晶化や分離しないで混ざり使いやすい状態になるための加工方法に関するものである。 - 特許庁
This method for processing a food comprises crushing the plant seeds to be mixed with the honey until to give a paste, and then mixing the obtained paste with the heated honey in a specific ratio.例文帳に追加
はちみつと一緒にする植物性種子類をペースト状まで潰し、加熱したはちみつと一定の割合で混ぜる事により問題を解決した加工方法である。 - 特許庁
The skin care preparation includes a squeezed juice or pulverized product of a plant such as Allium tuberosum etc., belonging the genus Allium of the family Liliaceae and honey as active ingredients.例文帳に追加
ニラなどのユリ科ネギ属植物体の搾汁液または粉砕物と蜂蜜を有効成分として含有する皮膚外用剤とする。 - 特許庁
To provide an enzyme inhibitor which contains a pollen dumpling (honeybee obtains pollen from stamen of plant, rounds it by honey and salivary, and hardens it in a group) as an active ingredient, and can be used for various applications such as a drug and a cosmetic.例文帳に追加
花粉荷(蜜蜂が植物の雄しべから花粉を得、蜂蜜や唾液で丸めて団子状に固めたもの)を有効成分として含有し、医薬品、化粧品等の様々な用途に利用することが可能な酵素阻害剤の提供。 - 特許庁
-
履歴機能過去に調べた
単語を確認! -
語彙力診断診断回数が
増える! -
マイ単語帳便利な
学習機能付き! -
マイ例文帳文章で
単語を理解!
Wiktionary英語版での「honey plant」の意味 |
honey plant
発音
名詞
honey plant (複数形 honey plants)
- (beekeeping) Any plant from which bees usually collect nectar, pollen, or both for making honey.
- 1869 September, A. W. Harlan, “Honey Dews in the West and Southwest [From the Keokuk ‘Gate City.’]”, in Samuel Wagner, editor, American Bee Journal, volume V, number 3, Washington, D.C.: Samuel Wagner, OCLC 920419866, page 47, column 1:
- [T]he only reason that buckwheat is considered valuable as a honey plant, is because it blooms generally in dry weather late in the fall, when the difference in the temperature between two o'clock in the day and two o'clock at night is sufficient to favor the production of honey.
- 1872, “Proceedings”, in Transactions of the North American Bee Keepers’ Society, at their First Annual Session Held at the City of Cleveland, on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, December 6–8, 1872, Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Printing and Publishing House, OCLC 33979763, topic no. 6 (What are the Best Honey Producing Plants?), page 13, column 1:
- 1922 January, E[verett] F[ranklin] Phillips; George S. Demuth, “Peculiarities of the Region”, in Beekeeping in the Tulip-tree Region (Farmers’ Bulletin; no. 1222), Washington, D.C.: United States Department of Agriculture, OCLC 15265293, page 9:
- The lack of literature concerning the tulip-tree as a honey-plant is a serious one and the chief object of this bulletin is to make up this deficiency.
- a. 1914, John Muir, “The Mountains of California”, in Nature Writings: The Story of My Boyhood and Youth; My First Summer in the Sierra; The Mountains of California; Stickeen; Selected Essays (Library of America; 92), New York, N.Y.: Library of America, published 1997, →ISBN, chapter XVI (The Bee-pastures), page 523:
- 2009, Kim Flottum, “Some of the Better Honey Plants to Know”, in The Backyard Beekeeper’s Honey Handbook: A Guide to Creating, Harvesting, and Cooking with Natural Honeys (Backyard Series), Beverly, Mass.: Quarry Books, Quayside Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 48:
- HONEYSUCKLE—Lonicera spp.: […] This introduced, escaped shrub is strikingly overlooked as a major honey plant.
- (botany) The name of a number of not closely related plants.
- A plant of the genus Hoya, especially the porcelainflower or waxplant (Hoya carnosa) from the tendency for excess nectar to drip from its flowers.
- 1839 May, “Notices of New Plants”, in Robert Marnock, editor, The Floricultural Magazine, and Miscellany of Gardening, volume III, number XXXVI, London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co., […]; Sheffield, South Yorkshire: G. Ridge, page 286:
- HOYA CORIACEA. Thick leaved Hoya. […] Those of our readers unacquainted with the genus will, perhaps, understand us better by saying, that this is a kind of honey plant, familiar to most persons, with its waxy white flowers, and often grown in windows. The Hoya coriacea appears to be a thicker foliaged plant, stronger in its stem, and perhaps less inclined to become a twiner or creeper than the common honey plant.
- 1855 June 5, T. Appleby, “Plants for Baskets”, in George W. Johnson and Robert Hogg, editors, The Cottage Gardener, and Country Gentleman’s Companion: A Journal of Horticulture, Rural and Domestic Economy, Botany, and Natural History, volume XIV, number CCCXLIX, London: Published for the proprietors, […], OCLC 503937615, page 161, column 2:
- 1875 August, Roderick Campbell, “Hoya”, in Thomas Meehan, editor, The Gardener’s Monthly: Devoted to Horticulture, Arboriculture & Rural Affairs, volume XVII (Old Series; volume VIII (New Series)), number 8, Philadelphia, Pa.: Charles H. Marot, publisher, […], page 234, column 1:
- The flowers [of the Hoya carnosa] are produced in umbels on short stems sometimes as many as a dozen on a stem; in the centre of each flower there is, as it were, a drop of thick liquid distilled, which if tasted has the luscious flavor of honey; hence the plant in England and Scotland goes under the name of Honey Plant; but quite the reverse in this country, where it is called Wax Plant.
- 1876, Samuel Wood, “Division III. The Flower Garden.”, in A Plain Guide to Good Gardening: Or How to Grow Vegetables, Fruits, and Flowers: […], 2nd edition, London: Crosby Lockwood & Co., […], OCLC 4893602, book I (Kitchen, Fruit, かつ Flower Gardens), section 6 (Window Gardening), page 130:
- Hoya carnosa (honey-plant). Although this is a hot-house plant it can be grown in the window of the sitting-room, and I have grown and flowered it exceedingly well in an ordinary greenhouse; […]
- 2006, “House Plants”, in Dennis R. Pittenger, editor, Retail Garden Center Manual (University of California Agriculture かつ Natural Resources Publication; 3492), Oakland, Calif.: University of California, Agriculture and Natural Resources Communication Services, →ISBN, table 4.3 (Plants for Specific Indoor Gardening Uses), page 66:
- Hoya imperialis […] Honey plant.
- A plant of the genus Melissa, especially lemon balm (Melissa officinalis).
- 2003, Stjepan Pepeljnjak; Ivan Kosalec; Zdenka Kalodera; Danica Kuštrak, “Natural Antimycotics from Croatian Plants”, in Mahendra Rai and Donatella Mares, editors, Plant-derived Antimycotics: Current Trends and Future Prospects, Binghamton, N.Y.: Food Products Press, The Haworth Press, →ISBN, page 66:
- Honey-plant [Melissa officinalis L[innaeus] [i.e., Carl Linnaeus] (family Lamiaceae)] contains a very low concentration of essential oil in leaves (0.02–0.2 vol%).
- 2015, Elaine Nowick, compiler, “H”, in Historical Common Names of Great Plains Plants, with Scientific Names Index, volume 1 (Common Names), Lincoln, Neb.: Zea Books, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries, →ISBN, page 195:
- Honey plant [Honey-plant] – Melissa officinalis L., […]
- Bishop's weed or false Queen Anne's lace (Ammi majus).
- 2012, Umberto Quattrocchi, “Ammi L. Apiaceae (Umbelliferae)”, in CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants: […], Boca Raton, Fla.: CRC Press, →ISBN, page 244, column 2:
- Ammi majus Linnaeus […] in English: bishop's flower, bishop's weed, bullwort, crow's foot, devil's carrot, false Queen Anne's lace, greater ammi, herb william, honey plant, lace flower, large bulwort, mayweed, Queen Anne's lace, toothpick ammi
- A plant of the genus Hoya, especially the porcelainflower or waxplant (Hoya carnosa) from the tendency for excess nectar to drip from its flowers.
別の表記
「honey plant」の部分一致の例文検索結果
該当件数 : 9件
This skin care preparation may additionally contain a honey ingredient 3 and a plant extract 6 containing minute amounts of organic germanium, extracted from at least one plant among Curcuma domestica, Saururaceae, San-chi ginseng carrot, bracket fungus of the genus fomes, Eriobotryae folium, ginger and capsicum.例文帳に追加
なお、蜂蜜成分3と、ウコン、ドクダミ、田七人参、霊芝、枇杷葉、生姜、及びトウガラシの少なくともいずれか一つの植物から抽出され、微量の有機ゲルマニウムを含む植物エキス6とをさらに含有することを特徴とするものとしてもよい。 - 特許庁
The skin-beautifying Houttuynia cordata healthy tea comprises drinking solution including honey into a mixture obtained by adding 1-5 wt.% of squeezed liquid produced by squeezing aloe leaves to extract liquid obtained by soaking dried Houttuynia cordata produced by crushing dried Houttuynia cordata plant to be reduced in moisture to 1-10 wt.% through drying the Houttuynia cordata plant in shade.例文帳に追加
どくだみ草を陰干しにより、水分が1〜10重量%まで乾燥したどくだみ草を破砕した乾燥どくだみ草を50℃から100℃の温度の温水中で30分〜2時間浸漬して抽出した液に、アロエ葉を圧搾して得た圧搾液を1〜5重量%添加した混合物に蜂蜜を含ませた飲料溶液によるものである。 - 特許庁
|
|
honey plantのページの著作権
英和・和英辞典
情報提供元は
参加元一覧
にて確認できます。
日本語ワードネット1.1版 (C) 情報通信研究機構, 2009-2010 License All rights reserved. WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. License |
|
Copyright © 2024 CJKI. All Rights Reserved | |
Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA) and/or GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). Weblio英和・和英辞典に掲載されている「Wiktionary英語版」の記事は、Wiktionaryのhoney plant (改訂履歴)の記事を複製、再配布したものにあたり、Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC-BY-SA)もしくはGNU Free Documentation Licenseというライセンスの下で提供されています。 |
ピン留めアイコンをクリックすると単語とその意味を画面の右側に残しておくことができます。 |
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
「honey plant」のお隣キーワード |
weblioのその他のサービス
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |