| twitch grass | <botany> See Quitch grass. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
|---|---|
| johnson grass | <botany> A tall perennial grass (Sorghum Halepense), valuable in the Southern and Western States for pasture and hay. The rootstocks are large and juicy and are eagerly sought by swine. Synonym: Cuba grass, Means grass, Evergreen millet, and Arabian millet. Origin: Named after W. Johnson of Alabama, who planted it about 1840-1845. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| lyme grass | <botany> A coarse perennial grass of several species of Elymus, especially. E. Canadensis, and the European E. Arenarius. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| grass |
any of a family (Gramineae) of plants with long, narrow leaves, jointed stems, flowers in spikelets and seed-like fruit, as wheat, rye, barley, oats, etc.
Ãâó: www.sdvc.uwyo.edu/grasshopper/ghcoglos.htm
|
|---|---|
| grass |
Plants of the family Poaceae (Gramineae). Grasses are characterized by rounded, hollow or pithy jointed stems (culms), and narrow sheathing leaves with parallel veins. The leaves alternate on two sides of the stem. The junction of the blade and sheath often bears an erect fringe of hairs (ligule) and sometimes also earlike projections (auricles). Flowers are borne in reduced spikes (spiklets). See drawing of plant group characteristics.
Ãâó: www.lib.ksu.edu/wildflower/glossary.html
|
| grass |
any of 9,000 species in the monocotyledonous family Poaceae (These plants have leaf sheaths split lengthwise on the opposite side of the blade. The stem is cylindrical and hollow between the nodes. Grasses are wind pollinated.)
Ãâó: www.sensesofwildness.com/africa/GLOSSARY.HTM
|
| grass |
Another name for cannabis/marijuana.
Ãâó: www.drugstrategy.central.sa.edu.au/20_druginfo/c_g...
|
| grass |
Geographical Resource Analysis Support System. A public-domain raster GIS modeling product of the US Army Corp of Engineers' Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (USACERL).
Ãâó: www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/staff/m.blake/magis/glossary/...
|
| GRASS | a skirt made of long blades of grass |
|---|---|
| GRASS | either of two N. American chiefly insectivorous green snakes |
| GRASS | any of numerous nonvenomous longitudinally-striped viviparous North and Central American snakes |
| GRASS | harmless European snake with a bright yellow collar |
| GRASS | gaunt Tasmanian evergreen shrubby tree with slender tapering leaves 3 to 5 feet long |
| GRASS | any of several Australian evergreen perennials having short thick woody stems crowned by a tuft of grasslike foliage and yielding acaroid resins |
| GRASS | elegant tree having either a single trunk or a branching trunk each with terminal clusters of long narrow leaves and large panicles of fragrant white, yellow or red flowers |
| GRASS | one of many subfamilies into which some classification systems subdivide the Liliaceae but not widely accepted |
| GRASS | annual European vetch with red flowers |
| GRASS | annual European vetch with red flowers |
| GRASS | a divorced woman or a woman who is separated from her husband |
| GRASS | a man who is divorced from (or separated from) his wife |
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|
Á¦Ç°¸í |
ÆÇ¸Å»ç |
º¸ÇèÄÚµå | ¼ººÐ/ÇÔ·® | ±¸ºÐ/º¸Çè±Þ¿© |
|---|