「Flax」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Flax

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  • Flax also played flute, clarinet and trombone in add
  • Production aimed mainly flax and wheat till 1850.
  • The women spun and wove flax and wool.
  • Fraleigh grew flax and hemp near Forest, Ontario.
  • several common names, including littlepod false flax and small seed false flax.
  • idered a pest on cotton, com, tobacco, soybean, flax and other crops.
  • Flax and Rosenfield asked LaDou to help develop a me
  • g was called, Hipp and Jenneman were fired, and Flax and Rosenfield resumed control of CPK.
  • The Linen Memorial will be a feature at the Flax and Linen Biennale in Quebec in 2011, a USA tou
  • al industries such as leather and glove-making, flax and hemp production, stone working, engineering
  • 19th centuries, with particular emphasis on the flax and linen industry is illustrated with a perman
  • In 1985, Flax and Rosenfield pooled $200,000 in bank loans an
  • lso an important market town and centre for the flax and linen industry before becoming a milk and d
  • As a linen mill it processed flax and supplied canvas to the Royal Navy but when
  • , Ciabatta Rolls, European Sourdough Rye Bread, Flax and Sunflower Seed Bread, Healthy Hemp Rolls, K
  • dependence, while beneath the honesty plant and flax are interwoven for Honesty and Industry.
  • False flax belongs to the Brassicaceae (mustard and cabbag
  • The Flax Bollworm (Heliothis ononis) is a species of mot
  • acing of lumber (of certain kinds), hemp, wool, flax, borax, tin plates, salt and other articles on
  • Marty Flax, born Von Flachsenhaar in New York City (Octobe
  • The remains of Flax Bourton railway station are near the tunnel.
  • and under the A370 road to enter a cutting with Flax Bourton tunnel at the summit.
  • ayed involving a Lashings world XI and Backwell Flax Bourton Cricket Club in aid of multiple scleros
  • In 1860 Flax Bourton railway station was opened by the Brist
  • ack to Norman times and is the home of Backwell Flax Bourton Cricket Club.
  • BS19 covered:Backwell, Churchill, Congresbury, Flax Bourton, Nailsea and Yatton.
  • world of acting through The Actor's Workshop in Flax Bourton, which is directed by Clara, his mother
  • South Bristol, but now lives with his family in Flax Bourton.
  • TGWU Jute and Flax Branches
  • on the trophy beating Ealing in '94 and Clifton Flax Broughton in '95 whilst losing to Walsall in th
  • The town traded primarily in Lithuanian flax, but this trade languished after World War I. A
  • nd in the North Island and was planning to grow flax, but he and an acquaintance capsized their cano
  • He was manager of flax camps and a member of Belfast Corporation from
  • tural crop species, such as alfalfa, lespedeza, flax, clover, potatoes, chrysanthemum, dahlia, helen
  • ved four years as president of the Sebringville Flax Company.
  • nths before planting certain crops (sunflowers, flax, corn, or safflower).
  • ut, Continental weed, dead men's bones, devil's flax, devil's flower, doggies, dragon bushes, eggs a
  • n 1774 by James Backhouse (1720-1798), a Quaker flax dresser and linen manufacturer, and his sons Jo
  • ylor in 1789 as an alternative to the waning of flax dressing industry.
  • on the same site, the remains of which include flax drying fields with watch towers, derelict build
  • Other textiles, cotton, flax etc (evolving from the useage with wool) the st
  • Spinning flax fibres inside the cabin
  • th an episode like type 1290, A Fool Mistakes a Flax Field for a Lake.
  • village had a long history of growing hemp and flax for sailcloth manufacture, which made "Coker Ca
  • e Equalinium", a machine for the preparation of flax for spinning, and their father Daniel Dakeyne (
  • oint for coal, timber, iron and slate and later flax for the linen industry.Local legend has proved
  • une, a major Allied air force effort (Operation Flax) had cut off Axis supplies to North Africa.
  • Flax had previously taken a pizza making course with
  • e helm after the closure of his previous school Flax Hall Primary School in July 1989.
  • Vlaskaas is a Dutch cheese associated with the Flax Harvest Festival.
  • Flax harvesting (Emile Claus, 1904)
  • False flax has long been grown in Europe, and its oil used
  • ersified in the 18th century to include clover, flax, hops, sainfoin and woad.
  • uth Dakota proved too harsh and dry for growing flax, however, and by 1900 Salsola had colonized as
  • The Girl with the Flaxen Hair) , uses the color flax in its title.
  • There was once a flax industry in the village.
  • River, however, was a boon for Waregem, as its flax industry drove the local economy until well int
  • in the city becoming the booming centre of the flax industry until the end of the 16th century.
  • sixteen, he instead went for three years to the flax industry, entering the University of Edinburgh
  • y largely derelict following the decline of the flax industry.
  • Pollex flax is a moth of the Micronoctuidae family.
  • Lauren Flax is a prominent international DJ, songwriter and
  • with new or recyled (up-cycled) fibres such as flax, jute, hemp, Sugar cane, sisal, straw, recycled
  • en recorded visiting Abelia, Buddleja, and blue flax lily (Dianella caerulea) flowers in the garden;
  • calcareous soils support such species as fairy flax, Linum catharticum, harebell, Campanula rotundi
  • In Latvia it has been reported as a pest of flax Linum.
  • He made flax machinery and kitchen ranges of which he sold 1
  • troduced, and he constructed woollen as well as flax machinery.
  • Ditherington Flax Mill
  • Main article: Ditherington Flax Mill
  • In 1867, Charles Hendry opened a flax mill employing 60 workers in Stirton, Ontario.
  • Temple Works is a former flax mill in Holbeck, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
  • and began work as a journeyman mechanic at the flax mill of John Kendrew in Darlington, where the m
  • the Washburn becomes the 'Fairy Bridge' and the flax mill is mentioned explicitly.
  • Scotton Flax mill was erected in 1798 and run by the company
  • The Flax Mill (also locally known as the "Maltings") the
  • lic engine built in the 19th century to power a flax mill in Ladygrove, Derbyshire, England.
  • served the purpose of retaining humidity in the flax mill to prevent the linen thread from becoming
  • The remains of a flax mill can be seen at the edge of the reservoir,
  • eir, which shared the Scotton weir with Scotton Flax mill as its source of power.
  • cluding Elizabeth Bentley who started work at a flax mill at age 6.
  • In the past Lyme Handley had its own flax mill so provided a use for a crop other than gr
  • rst ever iron framed building, the Ditherington Flax Mill, located in the outskirts of Shrewsbury to
  • On Fort Road the old flax mill, mill race and weir on the Clady River are
  • was the blacksmith and A. Grant manager of the flax mill.
  • re were two silk mills, two cotton mills, and a flax mill.
  • In the 19th century there were extensine flax mills, as well as flour, oat and corn meal mill
  • am Beck, on Old Mill Lane were transformed into flax mills, making patent yarn and shoe thread.
  • Gallery, Glenveagh Castle and Newmills Corn and Flax Mills.
  • trol of weeds in cereal, corn, sorghum, onions, flax, mint, turf, and on non-cropland.
  • used as drying stations for the linen (known as flax) of local industries.
  • False flax oil is a pressed seed oil, derived from the Cam
  • ent for malpractice" in Germany for having used flax oil on patients, even though they had untreatab
  • omega-3 fatty acids in a ratio of 2:1, although flax oil is higher in omega-3 fatty acid, as are oth
  • rs are most commonly made with wood pulp, hemp, flax, or rice as a base material.
  • , illustrator and professor, best known for his flax paintings.
  • d whole grains like amaranth, barley, couscous, flax, pasta, oat, quinoa, wheat, and rice; and certa
  • f traditional weaving varieties of harakeke (NZ flax, Phormium spp.) donated by Rene Orchiston of Gi
  • off by Tui at a food source such as a flowering flax plant.
  • orridge, or hot cereal, made of wheat, rye, and flax, produced in Camrose, Alberta, Canada.
  • Fraleigh coordinated Canadian flax production in World War I: flax was shipped to
  • In 1910, corn and flax scutching were the main industries and an Agric
  • ed as a bulk carrier in which she hauled wheat, flax seed, rye, sugar, and in the early years pig ir
  • n be caught anywhere, including these harvested flax seeds
  • st sources are cacti (and other succulents) and flax seeds.
  • Studies on Kapiti Island show that they prefer flax, seral, and older forest.
  • soybeans, tofu, tempeh, soy beverages, linseed ( flax), sesame seeds, wheatberries, fenugreek, oats,
  • r Sanchez, Felix Da Housecat, Larry Tee, Lauren Flax, SIA, and others.
  • The Lord Howe Flax Snail has a brown, pointed shell up to 7 cm lon
  • sil evidence indicate that the Lord Howe Island Flax Snail was formerly widespread and abundant on t
  • The New Zealand flax snail or pupuharakeke, scientific name Placosty
  • He became the managing director of two flax spinning companies; Henry Campbell and Co., and
  • Based in a former flax spinning mill, The Cluny occupies part of the w
  • s later he became partner in, and manager of, a flax spinning company at Douglastown in Forfarshire,
  • hn Marshall who introduced major innovations in flax spinning and built the celebrated Marshall's Mi
  • Tales contained a much shorter variant, Hateful Flax Spinning, but it is the later version that beca
  • estaurateurs, Richard L. Rosenfeld and Larry S. Flax, start a new restaurant concept, California Piz
  • osed, starting from feedstocks such as tobacco, flax straw and the residues from the production of b
  • DG) is an anti-oxidant phytochemical present in flax, sunflower, sesame, and pumpkin seeds.
  • ld often be equipped with animal fat, straw and flax to use as fuel when setting fires amongst enemy
  • The Flax Tortrix (Cnephasia asseclana) is a moth of the
  • The flax trade in the region also continued to use Foxto
  • Flax trader James Farrow purchases an acre of land a
  • l - The Perseverance, leaves Sydney looking for flax trading possibilities in the south of the South
  • Captain William Wiseman in the Elizabeth on a flax trading voyage, names Port Cooper (now Lyttelto
  • bruary 1994, the first official event being the Flax Trust Ball, a gala evening for 500 local and in
  • Flax was woven into linen in nearby Germantown.
  • and the damp climate of the Lagan Valley, that flax was first grown there.
  • A lazy girl tore out handfuls of flax when she found a knot while spinning.
  • introduced the new technique of “wet spinning” flax, which revolutionised the flax trade.
  • ntroduction of new plants, including potato and flax, which quickly became popular; organizing the r
  • It was based on a story by Roger Flax who wrote the screenplay along with Ed Apfel.
  • LaDou was approached by Larry Flax, who co-founded the California Pizza Kitchen in
  • strial process for the economical production of flax with help from researchers at the Engineering E