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(-+of+plant)

  • 1 plant

    1. noun
    1) (anything growing from the ground, having a stem, a root and leaves: flowering/tropical plants.) augalas, sodinukas
    2) (industrial machinery: engineering plant.) įrengimai, mašinos
    3) (a factory.) gamykla, fabrikas
    2. verb
    1) (to put (something) into the ground so that it will grow: We have planted vegetables in the garden.) (pa)sodinti
    2) (to make (a garden etc); to cause (a garden etc) to have (plants etc) growing in it: The garden was planted with shrubs; We're going to plant an orchard.) apsodinti, įveisti
    3) (to place heavily or firmly: He planted himself between her and the door.) įtaisyti, pastatyti
    4) (to put in someone's possession, especially as false evidence: He claimed that the police had planted the weapon on his brother.) pakišti, primesti
    - planter

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > plant

  • 2 rock-plant

    noun (any plant which grows among rocks eg on mountains, often also grown in rockeries.) kalnų augalas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > rock-plant

  • 3 clone

    [kləun] 1. verb
    (to produce a copy of an animal or plant from a single cell of that animal or plant.) klonuoti
    2. noun
    (a copy of an animal or plant produced from that animal or plant.) klonuotas gyvulys/augalas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > clone

  • 4 seed

    [si:d] 1. noun
    1) (the (part of) the fruit of a tree, plant etc from which a new plant may be grown: sunflower seeds; grass seed.) sėkla
    2) (the beginning from which anything grows: There was already a seed of doubt in her mind.) sėkla, grūdas
    3) ((in a sporting competition etc) a seeded player.) atrinktas žaidėjas
    2. verb
    1) ((of a plant) to produce seed: A plant seeds after it has flowered.) brandinti sėklas
    2) (in golf, tennis etc, to arrange (good players) in a competition so that they do not compete against each other till the later rounds.) atrinkti
    - seedling
    - seedy
    - seediness
    - seedbed
    - go to seed

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > seed

  • 5 pepper

    ['pepə] 1. noun
    1) (the dried, powdered berries of a certain plant, used for seasoning food: white/black pepper; This soup has too much pepper in it.) pipirai
    2) (the plant bearing these berries: a pepper plant.) pipiras
    3) (any of several red, yellow, or green, hollow seed-containing fruits used as food: red peppers stuffed with rice.) paprika
    4) (any of the plants which bear these.) paprika
    2. verb
    1) (to put pepper in or on (some food): You don't have to pepper the soup.) berti pipirų, pipiruoti
    2) ((with with) to throw, fire etc many, usually small, objects at (someone): He peppered them with bullets.) apiberti
    - peppercorn
    - pepper-mill
    - peppermint

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > pepper

  • 6 vegetable

    ['ve‹təbl]
    1) (a plant or part of a plant, other than a fruit, used as food: We grow potatoes, beans and other vegetables; ( also adjective) vegetable oils.) daržovė
    2) (a plant: Grass is a vegetable, gold is a mineral and a human being is an animal.) augalas
    - vegetarianism
    - vegetate
    - vegetation

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > vegetable

  • 7 cane

    [kein] 1. noun
    1) (the stem of certain types of plant (eg sugar plant, bamboo etc).) stiebas, nendrė
    2) (a stick used as an aid to walking or as an instrument of punishment: He beat the child with a cane.) lazda
    2. verb
    (to beat with a cane: The schoolmaster caned the boy.) mušti lazda

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > cane

  • 8 cassava

    ((also tapioca plant) a tropical plant, whose roots yield tapioca.) manijokas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > cassava

  • 9 cutting

    1) (a piece of plant cut off and replanted to form another plant.) auginys, gyvašakė
    2) (an article cut out from a newspaper etc: She collects cuttings about the Royal Family.) iškarpa
    3) (a trench dug through a hillside etc, in which a railway, road etc is built.) iškasa, perkasa

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > cutting

  • 10 flower

    1. noun
    (the part of a plant or tree from which fruit or seed grows, often brightly coloured and sometimes including the stem on which it grows: a bunch of flowers.) gėlė
    2. verb
    ((of plants etc) to produce flowers: This plant flowers in early May.) žydėti
    - flowery
    - flower-bed
    - flower-pot
    - in flower

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > flower

  • 11 leaf

    [li:f]
    plural - leaves; noun
    1) (a part of a plant growing from the side of a stem, usually green, flat and thin, but of various shapes depending on the plant: Many trees lose their leaves in autumn.) lapas
    2) (something thin like a leaf, especially the page of a book: Several leaves had been torn out of the book.) lapas, lakštas
    3) (an extra part of a table, either attached to one side with a hinge or added to the centre when the two ends are apart.) atlenkiamoji (stalo) lenta
    - leafy
    - turn over a new leaf

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > leaf

  • 12 mimosa

    [mi'məuzə]
    (a plant with small flowers and fern-like leaves which close when touched (also called sensitive plant).) mimoza

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > mimosa

  • 13 parasite

    (an animal or plant that lives on another animal or plant without giving anything in return: Fleas are parasites; He is a parasite on society.) parazitas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > parasite

  • 14 pea

    [pi:]
    1) (the round seed of a kind of climbing plant, eaten as a vegetable: We had roast beef, potatoes and peas for dinner.) žirnis
    2) (the plant which produces these seeds: We planted peas and beans this year.) žirnis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > pea

  • 15 pot

    [pot] 1. noun
    (any one of many kinds of deep container used in cooking, for holding food, liquids etc or for growing plants: a cooking-pot; a plant-pot; a jam-pot; The waiter brought her a pot of tea.) puodas, puodelis, indelis
    2. verb
    (to plant in a pot.) sodinti á vazonà
    - pothole
    - pot-shot
    - take pot luck

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > pot

  • 16 stalk

    I [sto:k] noun
    (the stem of a plant or of a leaf, flower or fruit: If the stalk is damaged, the plant may die.) kotas
    II [sto:k] verb
    1) (to walk stiffly and proudly, eg in anger: He stalked out of the room in disgust.) išdidžiai žingsniuoti
    2) (to move menacingly through a place: Disease and famine stalk (through) the country.) šliaužti, plisti
    3) (in hunting, to move gradually as close as possible to game, eg deer, trying to remain hidden: Have you ever stalked deer / been deer-stalking?) sėlinti

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > stalk

  • 17 transplant

    1. verb
    1) (to remove (an organ of the body) and put it into another person or animal: Doctors are able to transplant kidneys.) persodinti
    2) (to remove (skin) and put it on another part of the body.) persodinti
    3) (to plant in another place: We transplanted the rose-bush (into the back garden).) persodinti
    2. noun
    1) (an operation in which an organ or skin is transplanted: He had to have a kidney transplant.) persodinimas, transplantacija
    2) (an organ, skin, or a plant that is transplanted: The transplant was rejected by the surrounding tissue.) persodintas organas/audinys/augalas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > transplant

  • 18 tuber

    ['tju:bə]
    (a swelling on the stem or root of a plant, in which food is stored: Potatoes are the tubers of the potato plant.) gumbas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > tuber

  • 19 vine

    1) (a type of climbing plant which bears grapes.) vynuogė
    2) (any climbing or trailing plant.) vijoklis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > vine

  • 20 -stemmed

    a thick-stemmed plant; He smoked a short-stemmed pipe.) -kotis

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > -stemmed

См. также в других словарях:

  • plant disease — ▪ plant pathology Introduction       an impairment of the normal state of a plant that interrupts or modifies its vital functions.       All species of plants, wild and cultivated alike, are subject to disease. Although each species is… …   Universalium

  • Plant breeding — is the art and science of changing the genetics of plants in order to produce desired characteristics.[1] Plant breeding can be accomplished through many different techniques ranging from simply selecting plants with desirable characteristics for …   Wikipedia

  • Plant hormone — Plant hormones (also known as phytohormones) are chemicals that regulate plant growth. Plant hormones are signal molecules produced within the plant, and occur in extremely low concentrations. Hormones regulate cellular processes in targeted… …   Wikipedia

  • Plant physiology — is a subdiscipline of botany concerned with the function, or physiology, of plants.Salisbury, Frank B. Cleon W. Ross, 1992. Plant physiology , 4th ed. (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing). ISBN 0 534 15162 0] Closely related fields include …   Wikipedia

  • Plant morphology — (or phytomorphology) is the general term for the study of the morphology (physical form and external structure) of plants. [Raven, P. H., R. F. Evert, S. E. Eichhorn. Biology of Plants , 7th ed., page 9. (New York: W. H. Freeman, 2005). ISBN 0… …   Wikipedia

  • Plant virus — Plant viruses are viruses affecting plants.Plant viruses, like all other viruses, are obligate intracellular parasites that do not have the molecular machinery to replicate without the host. The plant viruses are defined as viruses pathogenic to… …   Wikipedia

  • Plant breeders' rights — (PBR), also known as plant variety rights (PVR), are intellectual property rights granted to the breeder of a new variety of plant (or to another person or entity that can claim title in the new plant variety by, for example, agreement with the… …   Wikipedia

  • plant — [ plɑ̃ ] n. m. • XIVe « action de planter »; de planter 1 ♦ Techn. Ensemble de végétaux de même espèce plantés dans un même terrain; le terrain ainsi planté. ⇒ pépinière, planche, plantation. Un plant d arbres, de rosiers. Acheter des plants chez …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Plant tissue culture — is a practice used to propagate plants under sterile conditions, often to produce clones of a plant. Different techniques in plant tissue culture may offer certain advantages over traditional methods of propagation, including:* The production of… …   Wikipedia

  • Plant anatomy — or phytotomy is the general term for the study of the internal structure of plants. While originally it included plant morphology, which is the description of the physical form and external structure of plants, since the mid Twentieth Century the …   Wikipedia

  • Plant taxonomy — is the science that finds, describes, classifies, identifies, and names plants. It thus is one of the main branches of taxonomy. Plant taxonomy is closely allied to plant systematics, and there is no sharp boundary between the two. In practice,… …   Wikipedia

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