「twigs」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

twigs

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  • omposed of an old wooden door, bricks, velvet, twigs, a female form made of pig skin, glass, linole
  • 2737 BC, from tea leaves on burning tea twigs, after they were carried up from the fire by t
  • onsists of multiple layers of grasses and thin twigs, and is lined with large feathers from other s
  • , smoke fuel (besides peat, alderwood, juniper twigs and spruce twigs were used), yeast brands, dur
  • a system of identification based on leaves and twigs and on the position of buds to aid identificat
  • is distilled from the leaves and sometimes the twigs and branches of the tree whereas neroli essent
  • trees over his head showering him with broken twigs and branches, S/Sgt.
  • and shoots compared to a more abrasive diet of twigs and bark.
  • lm fronds, in old Ipomoea capsules and in dead twigs and sticks of Araucaria, Lantana and Ricinus s
  • cIlver was based on the study of more than 850 twigs and 650 seed cone specimens; the holotype spec
  • from the activities in the building or - pine twigs and various small animals - from what at the t
  • They feed on the leaves, twigs and buds.
  • The tall, bushy shrub has green stems and twigs and highly reduced leaves.
  • w nests are made of sticks and lined with fine twigs and rushes.
  • The nest is a relatively flat platform of twigs and leaves.
  • al in that it is arboreal, and builds nests of twigs and leaves.
  • New twigs and leaves are somewhat woolly, but older part
  • It builds a cup nest out of twigs and other vegetation in a rock crevice.
  • It has curved foliage twigs and very long needles, from 25-40 cm. in fasci
  • ere likely browsers that fed mainly on leaves, twigs, and other nonresistant vegetation.
  • The species builds nests from twigs and lays from 2 to 3 blue eggs.
  • It branches into angular twigs and is reddish brown in color.
  • lly lays three eggs in platform nest made from twigs and branches.
  • The nest is a bulky cup made of grass and twigs and placed in a bush.
  • The nest is made of twigs and bark lined with plant fibre and placed in
  • t raises its own young, nesting in a saucer of twigs and laying two to three eggs.
  • The nest is a shallow saucer of twigs and plant fibers, lined with leaves, in thick
  • Its twigs and foliage are covered in a dense coat of whi
  • One crow was observed whittling twigs and leaves with its beak to fashion grabbers d
  • pplied to architectural details constructed of twigs and branches, usually peeled, to form decorati
  • of raw material by non-human species includes twigs and found objects as used by birds to make nes
  • asy to use in cooking because they can be used twigs and all, unlike basils with larger leaves.
  • The tree's bark may split and the twigs and branches may die back and this sometimes r
  • a, and its diet consists primarily of grasses, twigs, and young shoots.
  • small insects and other arthropods taken from twigs and foliage in the lower branches of trees.
  • nd limestone crevices to forage on bark, small twigs and leaves.
  • dance the male and female face each on nearby twigs and twitch, bob and sing like mechanical toys.
  • The leaves, twigs, and bark of the tree also contain natural ins
  • The twigs are pale green and covered with rusty down at
  • During winter in the Ozarks of Missouri, its twigs are sought as food by the local deer; and Whit
  • The twigs are red to grayish brown, slender, and glabrou
  • Twigs are glabrous or may have "scattered hairs".
  • The smaller twigs are covered lightly in white glandular bristle
  • Its foliage and twigs are coated with glandular bristles.
  • The young twigs are covered with very fine hairs (puberulent).
  • The young twigs are reddish and grow gray with age.
  • Young twigs are coated in yellow-brown hairs.
  • The dried spiny twigs are collected in heaps for fencing.
  • Leafy red spruce twigs are boiled as a part of making spruce beer.
  • Raised in Belgium in 1863, the young twigs are prone to dieback in hard winters.
  • The young twigs are velvety or woolly with hairy coats; older
  • Its smaller twigs are bristly and glandular or hairy to woolly.
  • It has gray bark on its branches and the young twigs are purple in color.
  • The twigs are glabrous or thinly hairy, and odorless whe
  • The twigs are grayish-yellow, stout, with large triangul
  • Twigs are rather stout and flexible, and reddish bud
  • Twigs are initially dark red and mature to a dark br
  • The stems, and especially new twigs, are sometimes purple in color and slightly ha
  • Older bark is greyish, but twigs are brown, yellow or reddish.
  • The branches become long and the younger twigs are fuzzy with white or light brown hairs.
  • The multibranched stems and twigs are greenish or tan when young and age to wood
  • The woody parts are gray when aged and new twigs are green, hairy, and sometimes glandular.
  • However, pawpaw leaves and twigs are seldom bothered by rabbits or deer.
  • The larger branches have dull red bark and the twigs are generally woolly.
  • The twigs are yellowish or whitish, with short velvety h
  • Often, all the twigs are of uniform length, except for one twig whi
  • The smaller twigs are coated in woolly fibers and studded with g
  • Its twigs are covered in small linear green leaves and f
  • New shoots and twigs are green to yellow in color, and older parts
  • Slender twigs are glabrous and silvery gray, with "numerous
  • The leaves and twigs are boiled and prepared as a sort of tea to so
  • are covered in shreddy bark and smaller, newer twigs are coated in fuzzy hairs.
  • aches 30 centimeters in height and its curving twigs are mostly naked, the small leaves appearing m
  • The brand new leaves at the apical tips of twigs are folded in half showing only the whitish, h
  • ); or for the common cold (Skagit): leaves and twigs, as a general tonic (Lummi).
  • d fibers which are suspended from the edges of twigs at the end of a tree branch.
  • are also pubescent with red-brown coloring to twigs; bark ranging green to brown.
  • It is erect with hairy branches, the smaller twigs bearing long bristles tipped with sticky gland
  • ing a bushfire, burning parts of trees such as twigs, branches or leaves become temporarily airborn
  • the bottom was made of sand, mud, dead leaves, twigs, branches, and trunks.
  • The bird forages on foliage, twigs, branches, trunks, and occasionally on the gro
  • Inland, twigs break off trees; progress generally impeded.
  • heir eggs are rarely deposited in the earth or twigs but are either glued fast in double rows to th
  • Early in the season, larvae tunnel in tender twigs causing twig die-back.
  • al spring from a chalk hill depositing lime on twigs, Charles rode out to find the spring and threw
  • The branches are gray or brown, the twigs coated in short woolly fibers when new and bec
  • e stems are brownish gray in color, with young twigs coated in light woolly fibers and older branch
  • Its highly branching stems taper to twigs coated in soft, rough, or silky hairs and visi
  • ear, leaving the shrub a naked thicket of gray twigs coated in waxy whitish hairs.
  • February, and consists of a platform of leafy twigs, constructed by both sexes in the upper foliag
  • Like all walnuts, the pith of the twigs contains air spaces; This chambered pith is br
  • ed trees may appear to have their branches and twigs covered with snow.
  • Its twigs develop on spur shoots.
  • Collecting and burning dead twigs during the winter is key to fighting infestati
  • 5 cm long racemes borne on the previous year's twigs; each flower is 5-10 mm diameter, with five wh
  • When crushed, its leaves and green twigs emit a fragrance described as resembling maras
  • trochanteric fossa, where it anastomoses with twigs from the superior gluteal artery and inferior
  • enge upon the sea by bringing stones and small twigs from the mountains nearby over the sea in an e
  • al material before beginning to add leaves and twigs from its host.
  • e that involved HeavyShield placing stones and twigs from the Oldman River, which feature photocopi
  • much like capillaries branch from arteries, or twigs from branches of a tree.
  • It is hairy in texture, the youngest twigs hairiest with a feltlike coat of short, whitis
  • The twigs harden into sharp-tipped thorns as they age.
  • land, which is spiced with juniper berries and twigs, have survived the advent of hops, although gr
  • re covered in reddish-brown bark and the newer twigs have fuzzy hairs.
  • The twigs have a faintly rank odor, but much less so tha
  • The stem is gray-brown with new twigs having a reddish color and fuzzy texture.
  • d growing solitary to scattered on dead fallen twigs in lowland forests dominated by hornbeam carpi
  • Kanagawa, Japan, where it grows on dead fallen twigs in lowland forests dominated by oak.
  • ed apetalous flowers appear on the second-year twigs in February.
  • r-eyed Opossum builds nests made of leaves and twigs in tree branches or under rocks and logs.
  • t is often planted for the red coloring of its twigs in the dormant season.
  • Kanagawa, Japan, where it grows on dead fallen twigs in lowland forests.
  • The leaves are arranged in six rows along the twigs, in alternating whorls of three; the scale lea
  • October and February, building a frail nest of twigs in tree or bush and laying a clutch of two glo
  • (others, however, are made of wood, grass, or twigs instead of glass).
  • But the servant girl used some pine twigs instead, and a short time later, a storm start
  • ) height and are characterized by stiff, thick twigs, leathery leaves and impenetrable, dense under
  • asses, but may occasionally eat shrubs, herbs, twigs, leaves and bark.
  • stones, large twigs, leaves).
  • Dust, dirt, twigs, leaves, burs, and everything else quickly bec
  • Such animals may resemble rocks, sand, twigs, leaves, and even bird droppings.
  • 10-20 meters above the forest floor, made with twigs, leaves, vines, and fur.
  • o 2.0 in) diameter nest is built of very small twigs, lichen and other mosses, and often lined with
  • usually nests in trees, building a platform of twigs lined with green leaves for the clutch of 2-4
  • The nest is a cup of twigs lined with grass and moss which is built in a
  • The nest is a lined bulky cup of twigs low in a tree.
  • The nest is a lined bulky cup of twigs low in a tree or treefern.
  • If infestations are heavy, twigs may die, but damage to the tree is usually min
  • Some of the twigs narrow to spines at the tips, especially in th
  • ow as white, spongy and globose tissues on the twigs of the plant.
  • good in expressing human thoughts just as the twigs of the banyan and the acacia trees are good in
  • eeds in the stem of litchi and in the terminal twigs of Tecoma stans.
  • The twigs of the Smokethorn are slender and densely cove
  • any other Neotropical Moraceae, the leaves and twigs of Poulsenia are covered in small prickles.
  • The larvae are known to live in tunnels in twigs of Julbernardia globiflora.
  • They are attached to the twigs of the tree with short petioles, creating a de
  • The larvae feed on the leaves, buds and twigs of Asimina species.
  • They bore in twigs of their host plant, near growing tip of new s
  • The emerging limbs and twigs of the East Asian mtDNA tree.
  • The forked twigs of Witch Hazel are preferred as divining rods.
  • all of the small intestine, among the terminal twigs of the superior mesenteric artery;
  • essential oil that is extracted from the green twigs of the bitter orange plant (Citrus aurantium v
  • The twigs of the cannabis plant (complete with leaves an
  • rochalcone (dihydrokanakugiol) can be found in twigs of L. lucida.
  • ower heads, on berries and also bore in tender twigs of Lantana species.
  • rochalcone (dihydrokanakugiol) can be found in twigs of Lindera lucida.
  • The larvae form galls encircling young twigs of chestnut, resembling in shape and size egg-
  • ; that is, they are usually found on the outer twigs of trees, rather than against the trunk.
  • me the adult will lay eggs in rings around the twigs of the host plant.
  • The terminal and secondary twigs of C. tenuipes are slender, cylindrical and ta
  • Eriodictyol was also found in the twigs of Millettia duchesnei , in Eupatorium arnotti
  • The branches are gray or brown, the twigs often coated in short woolly fibers when young
  • The many short gray twigs on the branches bear tiny, widely spaced everg
  • or fall, commonly incorporate blades of grass, twigs, or fallen pine needles as they grow.
  • -like cell lining; nests are typically in dead twigs or plant stems, or other similarly small natur
  • to put this lit bundle on the ground and then twigs or other small tinder be placed above it, then
  • Nest consists of a platform of twigs or plant stem in which generally two eggs are
  • The larvae enter the plant at the base of the twigs or leaves or sometimes bore directly into the
  • il party passes around a bundle of ash sticks, twigs or branches-the ashen faggot-bound with green
  • re a wheat-based crisp snack shaped like small twigs, originating in the United Kingdom.
  • ble idea, we ought first to enquire whether it twigs our sense of humor"
  • They attach twigs parallel to the axis of the case.
  • help avoid problems due to trapped dampness or twigs, pebbles, mud, etc.
  • Young twigs, petioles, and flower axils sometimes have sho
  • The nest is a lined cup of twigs placed low (at a height of 1-9 m [3-30 ft]) in
  • , this species handles photosynthesis with its twigs, rather than the short-lived leaves.
  • picting a scene from the legend of Svatopluk's twigs showing the king and his three sons.
  • them, bottle glass, pottery shards, tin cans, twigs, steel needles, some gum arabic, and open fire
  • two meters tall with purple-black branches and twigs studded with yellowish resin glands.
  • The ends of the twigs taper into sharp-tipped thorns.
  • They are known to break open twigs that contain ant larvae to eat them.
  • y elliptic with an acuminate apex and borne on twigs that occasionally feature corky wings.
  • shrub growing to 6 m (20 ft) tall with hollow twigs, the leaves are opposite, oval, 4-10 cm (1.6-3
  • Needle clusters are clipped from the twigs, the outer bark is removed, the inner bark is
  • in fascicles, growing straight out from naked twigs- these flowers have a strong, pleasant fragranc
  • t underneath, and often remain attached to the twigs through the winter after turning colors from r
  • The long branches bear twigs tipped with 40-50 cm long, glabrous, pinately
  • and have been stitched together by leaves and twigs to become “balloons” that whirl around a pie p
  • en the Brachialis and Pronator teres, supplies twigs to those muscles, and, in front of the medial
  • amouflages itself by mimicking dead leaves and twigs to lure its prey.
  • Great Lakes Ojibwa used the young branches and twigs to make baskets and other parts were used to t
  • The yellow-gray twigs turn gray via aging.
  • Dead blossoms may stick to spurs and twigs until harvest, providing a source of spores fo
  • Sumatran local watchman light a fire from wet twigs using a bamboo torch.
  • In some areas they are bunches of twigs, usually from fruit trees and preferably with
  • wn caterpillars as well as those that resemble twigs were greedily devoured.
  • e upper lip, which it uses to grasp leaves and twigs when feeding.
  • The twigs, when scraped, have a strong scent of oil of w
  • The twigs, when scraped, have a slight scent of oil of w
  • The nest is a small platform of twigs where one white egg is laid.
  • hile in the pterygopalatine canal it gives off twigs which descend in the lesser palatine canals to
  • This shrub is made up of erect twigs which are gray-green when new and age to gray
  • ils feed mostly on leaves and the soft bark of twigs while the larvae feed mostly on leaves.
  • from too great a height, with mass leaves and twigs whirling about the inside of the machine and g
  • fruit mummies and pruning any cankered or dead twigs will reduce inoculum levels, which will improv
  • shrubs and trees feeding on leaves and tender twigs with a potential for causing much damage when
  • ile, and the feet are well evolved to grasping twigs, with minute claws on the end which improve th
  • Twigs would be used as fuel, while the decayed flowe
  • However, the famous legend of Svatopluk's twigs, written by the Byzantine emperor Constantine
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