-
1 Spargel
m; -s, -, schw., südd. auch -n; BOT. asparagus; grüner / wilder Spargel green / wild asparagus; Schwetzinger Spargel white asparagus from Schwetzingen; Spargel stechen / schälen cut / peel asparagus; eine Portion Spargel a serving of asparagus* * *der Spargelasparagus* * *Spạr|gel ['ʃpargl]m -s, - or (Sw) f -, -nasparagus* * *Spar·gel<-s, ->[ˈʃpargl̩]* * *der; Spargels, Spargel, schweiz. auch die; Spargel, Spargeln asparagus no pl., no indef. art.* * *grüner/wilder Spargel green/wild asparagus;Schwetzinger Spargel white asparagus from Schwetzingen;Spargel stechen/schälen cut/peel asparagus;eine Portion Spargel a serving of asparagus* * *der; Spargels, Spargel, schweiz. auch die; Spargel, Spargeln asparagus no pl., no indef. art.* * *m.asparagus n. -
2 Spargelstange
-
3 гниль белая спаржи
англ. Sclerotinia disease of asparagus; stalk rot of asparagusнем. Stengelweißfäule, Spargel -
4 tallo
m.1 stem.2 caudex, shaft.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: tallar.* * ** * *SM1) [de flor] stem, stalk; [de hierba] blade2) And (=repollo) cabbage4) (=fruta) crystallized fruit* * *masculino stem, stalk* * *= stem, stalk, spur, green shoot, shoot.Ex. The disease symptoms observed were general plant and leaf stunting, leaf chlorosis, leaf and stem necrosis and plant death.Ex. Printing types are representations in reverse of letters of the alphabet, cast in relief on the ends of rectangular lead-alloy stalks about 24 mm. high.Ex. Cherry trees in general produce the fruit upon small spurs, from half an inch to two inches in length, which proceed from the sides and ends of the branches.Ex. The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex. This study indicates the need of fungicides/bactericides as adjuvants in tissue culture medium for obtaining sterile and viable shoots.----* tallo de espárrago = spear of asparagus, asparagus spear.* * *masculino stem, stalk* * *= stem, stalk, spur, green shoot, shoot.Ex: The disease symptoms observed were general plant and leaf stunting, leaf chlorosis, leaf and stem necrosis and plant death.
Ex: Printing types are representations in reverse of letters of the alphabet, cast in relief on the ends of rectangular lead-alloy stalks about 24 mm. high.Ex: Cherry trees in general produce the fruit upon small spurs, from half an inch to two inches in length, which proceed from the sides and ends of the branches.Ex: The global outbreak of swine flu has spread fear through the travel sector, blighting any green shoots of recovery from the financial crisis.Ex: This study indicates the need of fungicides/bactericides as adjuvants in tissue culture medium for obtaining sterile and viable shoots.* tallo de espárrago = spear of asparagus, asparagus spear.* * *stem, stalkse ha ido or está al tallo it has gone to seed* * *
Del verbo tallar: ( conjugate tallar)
tallo es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
talló es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
tallar
tallo
tallar ( conjugate tallar) verbo transitivo
1 ‹ madera› to carve;
‹escultura/mármol› to sculpt;
‹ piedras preciosas› to cut
2 (Méx)
verbo intransitivo (Col) [ zapatos] to be too tight
tallarse verbo pronominal (Méx)
‹ ojos› to rub
tallo sustantivo masculino
stem, stalk
tallar verbo transitivo
1 (dar forma, esculpir) to sculpt
(piedras preciosas) to cut
(la madera) to carve
(el metal) to engrave
2 (medir a una persona) to measure the height of
tallo sustantivo masculino stem, stalk
' tallo' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
caña
- médula
- cebolleta
- injerto
- palmito
- rastrero
- tronchar
English:
stalk
- stem
* * *tallo nm1. [de planta, flor] stem, stalktallo herbáceo herbaceous stalk;tallo leñoso woody stalk;tallo rastrero creeping stalk, trailing stalk;tallo trepador climbing stalk2. [brote] sprout, shoot;echar tallos to put out shoots* * *m BOT stalk, stem* * *tallo nm: stalk, stemtallo de maíz: cornstalk* * *tallo n stem / stalk -
5 espárrago
m.asparagus, sparrowgrass.* * *1 asparagus\¡vete a freír espárragos! familiar get lost!espárrago triguero wild asparagus* * *SM asparagus* * *masculino asparagusestar hecho un espárrago — (fam) to be thin as a rail (AmE) o (BrE) rake (colloq)
mandar a alguien a freír espárragos — (fam) to tell somebody to get lost (colloq)
* * *= asparagus, asparagus spear.Ex. Full-flavoured, deliciously sweet and tender, British asparagus is regularly described as the 'best in the world'.Ex. As asparagus spears age after harvest, shoot fibers can lignify and toughen.----* ¡a freír espárragos! = on your bike!.* escarabajo del espárrago = asparagus beetle.* mandar a freír espárragos = send + Nombre + packing.* punta de espárrago = asparagus tip.* tallo de espárrago = spear of asparagus, asparagus spear.* * *masculino asparagusestar hecho un espárrago — (fam) to be thin as a rail (AmE) o (BrE) rake (colloq)
mandar a alguien a freír espárragos — (fam) to tell somebody to get lost (colloq)
* * *= asparagus, asparagus spear.Ex: Full-flavoured, deliciously sweet and tender, British asparagus is regularly described as the 'best in the world'.
Ex: As asparagus spears age after harvest, shoot fibers can lignify and toughen.* ¡a freír espárragos! = on your bike!.* escarabajo del espárrago = asparagus beetle.* mandar a freír espárragos = send + Nombre + packing.* punta de espárrago = asparagus tip.* tallo de espárrago = spear of asparagus, asparagus spear.* * *asparaguspuntas de espárrago asparagus tipsmandar a algn a freír espárragos ( fam); to tell sb to get lost ( colloq), to tell sb where to go ( colloq)¡que se vayan a freír espárragos! they know where they can go! ( colloq), they can get lost! ( colloq)Compuesto:wild asparagus* * *
espárrago sustantivo masculino
asparagus;◊ mandar a algn a freír espárragos (fam) to tell sb to get lost (colloq)
espárrago m Bot asparagus ♦ LOC familiar: mandar a freír espárragos, to tell sb to go fly a kite o to tell sb to go jump in the river
' espárrago' also found in these entries:
English:
asparagus
* * *espárrago nmstalk of asparagus;espárragos asparagus;Fam Famirse a freír espárragos: ¡vete a freír espárragos! get lost!;me mandó a freír espárragos he told me to get lost, he told me where to goespárragos trigueros wild asparagus* * *m BOT asparagus;¡vete a freír espárragos! fam get lost! fam* * *espárrago nm: asparagus* * *espárrago n asparagus -
6 acelga
f.chard.* * *1 chard* * *SF Swiss chard* * *= chard, Swiss chard.Ex. Chard's leaves can be prepared like spinach, and its stalks like asparagus.Ex. Tucked in the supermarket's produce display, somewhere between the lettuce and the broccoli, you'll find nutrient-rich Swiss chard.----* penca de acelga = Swiss chard stalk, chard stalk.* * *= chard, Swiss chard.Ex: Chard's leaves can be prepared like spinach, and its stalks like asparagus.
Ex: Tucked in the supermarket's produce display, somewhere between the lettuce and the broccoli, you'll find nutrient-rich Swiss chard.* penca de acelga = Swiss chard stalk, chard stalk.* * *
acelga f Bot chard
* * *acelga nfchard* * *acelga nf: chard, Swiss chard* * *acelga n chard -
7 penca de acelga
(n.) = Swiss chard stalk, chard stalkEx. You can even steam Swiss chard stalks and eat them like asparagus.Ex. I love chard stalks, and it annoys me to no end that people would throw them away.* * *(n.) = Swiss chard stalk, chard stalkEx: You can even steam Swiss chard stalks and eat them like asparagus.
Ex: I love chard stalks, and it annoys me to no end that people would throw them away. -
8 tige
tige [tiʒ]feminine noun[de fleur, arbre] stem ; [de céréales, graminées] stalk* * *tiʒ1) ( de plante) gén stem, stalk2) ( de botte) leg3) ( baguette) rod; (partie allongée de clé, clou, rivet) shank4) ( de plume) shaft* * *tiʒ nf1) [fleur] stem2) [métal] rod* * *tige nf1 ( de plante) gén stem; ( plus épaisse et rigide) stalk; tige d'asperge asparagus spear; une tige de rhubarbe a stick of rhubarb; arbre de haute/basse tige standard/half-standard (tree);2 ( jeune arbre) sapling;3 Mode leg; chaussures à tige (basse)/à tige haute ankle/long boots;5 ( de plume) shaft;6 ( en généalogie) common ancestor; faire tige to found a line;7 ◑( cigarette) fag○ GB, ciggy○.tige de culbuteur Aut pushrod.[tiʒ] nom féminin[de blé, de maïs] stalk[d'une fleur] stem[arbre]haute/basse tige tall/half standard2. [axe - d'une épingle, d'une aiguille, d'un clou, d'un candélabre, d'une flèche] shaft ; [ - d'un cadran solaire] finger, pointer ; [ - d'un guéridon] pedestalclef à tige creuse/pleine key with a hollow/solid shank4. [d'une chaussure] upper6. ARCHITECTURE [de colonne] shaft7. AUTOMOBILE rod -
9 ὄρμενος
Grammatical information: m., pl. also -αMeaning: `shoot, stalk, stick, esp. of cabbage and asparagus' (Diph. Siph. a. Posidipp. [IIIa] in Ath.);Other forms: ( ὅρ-).Derivatives: ὀρμενόεις `with a (lang) stalk' (Nic.); ἐξ-ορμενίζω `ὄρμενα ἐκβάλλειν, to put forth shoots' (S. Ichn. 275 [uncertain], Nicostr. Com., Phryn., Poll.).Origin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Formally identical with the ptc. aor. of ὄρνυμι, which may be also semantically possible; cf. ἔρνος. (S. also ὀρόδαμνος.)Page in Frisk: 2,419Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄρμενος
-
10 fly
1) муха; pl мухи ( Muscidae)2) двукрылое•- ant fly
- anthomyiid fly
- anthomyzid fly
- aphid fles
- apple-seed chalcid fly
- armed fly
- ascalaphus fly
- asparagus fly
- assassin flies
- asteiid flies
- azalea fly
- bat flies
- bee flies
- big-eyed flies
- big-headed flies
- black flies
- black scavenger flies
- bluebottle fly
- boat flies
- bomb fly
- bot flies
- bracon flies
- braulid flies
- breeze fly
- brine flies
- bristle fly
- bulb flies
- cabbage root fly
- caddis flies
- carrot rust fly
- chalcid flies
- chamaemyid flies
- chameleon fly
- cheese flies
- cherry fruit fly
- chin fly
- Chinese-candle fly
- chloropid flies
- circular-seamed flies
- clusiid flies
- cluster fly
- common fruit fly
- common house fly
- common yellow dung fly
- crane flies
- cuckoo flies
- currant fruit fly
- dance flies
- demoiselle flies
- drone fly
- dryomyzid fly
- dung flies
- earthworm fly
- ensign flies
- ephemeral flies
- fairy flies
- false crane flies
- false stable fly
- finger-net caddis flies
- fish flies
- flat-footed flies
- flesh flies
- flower flies
- forest fly
- frit fly
- fruit fly
- giant stone flies
- golden-eyed flies
- grape-seed chalcid fly
- green flies
- green stone flies
- green-bottle fly
- green-winged stone flies
- hanging flies
- hanging scorpion flies
- harlequin flies
- harvest fly
- hawk flies
- heel fly
- helomyzid flies
- Hessian fly
- horn fly
- horse bot fly
- house fly
- hover flies
- humpbacked flies
- ichneumon flies
- kelp flies
- lantern flies
- large fruit flies
- latrine fly
- lauxaniid flies
- leaf-miner flies
- lesser bulb fly
- little house fly
- lonchaeid flies
- long-horned flies
- long-legged flies
- louse flies
- manure flies
- March flies
- marsh flies
- May flies
- Mediterranean fruit fly
- megalopteran flies
- melon fly
- microcaddis flies
- moth flies
- muscid flies
- mydas flies
- nest fly
- net-spinning caddis flies
- nostril flies
- odiniid flies
- olive fly
- onion bulb fly
- onion fly
- opomyzid flies
- oriental fruit fly
- otitid flies
- owl flies
- ox warble fly
- palm flies
- peacock fly
- petroleum fly
- phantom crane flies
- phorid flies
- picture-winged flies
- pomace fly
- primitive crane flies
- roachlike stone flies
- robber flies
- rolled-winged stone flies
- root-eating flies
- Russian fly
- rust flies
- sand flies
- scavenger flies
- scorpion flies
- seaweed flies
- serpent flies
- shore flies
- short-horned flies
- skipper flies
- small dung flies
- small winter stone flies
- small-headed flies
- snail-case caddis flies
- snake flies
- snipe flies
- snow fly
- snow scorpion fly
- soldier flies
- Spanish fly
- spear-marked flies
- spear-winged flies
- spider flies
- spiny-legged flies
- spongilla flies
- spring stone flies
- stable fly
- stalk-eyed flies
- stiletto flies
- stilt-legged flies
- stink flies
- stomach bot flies
- stone fly
- straight-seamed flies
- sun flies
- syrphid flies
- tachina flies
- tachinid flies
- tangle-veined flies
- tanypezid flies
- throat fly
- thunder flies
- toad fly
- trumpet-net caddis flies
- tsetse fly
- two-winged flies
- typhoid fly
- vinegar fly
- warble flies
- wasp fly
- white flies
- window flies
- winter crane flies
- winter stone flies* * *• муха• мухи -
11 stilus
stĭlus (not stylus), i, m. [for stiglus; Gr. stizô, to stick, puncture; stigma, mark, point; Sanscr. tig, to be sharp; tigmas, sharp; cf. Engl. stick, sting; Lat. stimulus; not connected with stulos].I.In gen., a stake, pale: extra vallum stili caeci, concealed stakes, Auct. B. Afr. 31, 5; cf. Sil. 10, 415 (for which stimuli, Caes. B. G. 7, 73 fin.):II.ligneus,
Amm. 23, 4, 5; 15, 10, 5.—In agriculture, a pointed instrument for freeing plants from worms or from shoots which grow too rankly, etc., Col. 11, 3, 53; Pall. Mart. 10, 20.—Of the stem or stalk of many plants (e. g. of the asparagus), Col. 11, 3, 46; 11, 3, 58; 5, 10, 13; 5, 10, 21.—In partic.A.A style used by the Romans for writing on waxen tablets (pointed, and usually made of iron):B.effer cito stilum, ceram et tabellas et linum,
Plaut. Bacch. 4, 4, 64; cf. id. ib. 4, 4, 76; 4, 9, 73; Quint. 1, 1, 27:cum otiosus stilum prehenderat, flaccebat oratio,
Cic. Brut. 24, 93:orationes paene Attico stilo scriptae,
with an Attic pen, id. ib. 45, 167; so,(comoediae quaedam) resipiant stilum Plautinum,
Gell. 3, 3, 13.—And with reference to the ecenomical use, in a double sense, Cic. de Or. 2, 23, 96.—Writing on wax was erased with the broad upper end of the style; hence the phrase stilum vertere, for to erase what one has written, Cic. Verr. 2, 2, 41, § 101:saepe stilum vertas, iterum quae digna legi sint, Scripturus,
Hor. S. 1, 10, 73.—But cf.:et mihi vertenti stilum in Gallias,
i. e. turning to write of, Amm. 29, 3, 1.—Comically:stilis me totum usque ulmeis conscribito,
i. e. with elm switches, Plaut. Ps. 1, 5, 131 (cf. conscribo).—Transf.1.= scriptio and scriptura, a setting down in writing, composing, composition; the practice of composing; manner of writing, mode of composition:2.stilus optimus et praestantissimus dicendi effector ac magister,
Cic. de Or. 1, 33, 150; 1, 60, 257; cf. id. ib. 3, 49, 190; Quint. 1, 9, 2; cf.:multus stilus et assidua lectio,
id. 10, 7, 4:stilus exercitatus,
i. e. a practised pen, Cic. Or. 44, 150:tardior stilus cogitationem moratur,
Quint. 1, 1, 28:neglegens,
id. 2, 4, 13:multus,
id. 10, 1, 1:tardus,
id. 10, 3, 5:rudis et confusus,
id. 1, 1, 28:fidelis,
id. 10, 7, 7:stilo incumbere,
Plin. Ep. 7, 29, 9:aliquid stilo prosequi,
id. ib. 1, 8, 8;2, 3, 3: signare stilo,
Vell. 1, 16, 1:non ita dissimili sunt argumento, sed tamen Dissimili oratione sunt factae ac stilo,
in speech and writing, Ter. And. prol. 12 (for which:oratione et scripturā,
id. Phorm. prol. 5); cf.:unus sonus est totius orationis et idem stilus,
the same tone and the same style of composition run through the whole speech, Cic. Brut. 26, 100:artifex stilus,
an artistic style, id. ib. 25, 96:familiares opes velut supremo distribuens stilo,
i. e. by his last will, Amm. 25, 3, 21.—A manner of speaking, mode of expression, style in speaking (post-Aug. and very rare; not as early as Quint.;* 3.in class. Lat. sermo, oratio, dictio, dicendi modus, ars, genus or forma): stilus pressus demissusque,
Plin. Ep. 1, 8, 5:pugnax et quasi bellatorins,
id. ib. 7, 9, 7:laetior,
id. ib. 3, 18, 10; cf.:diligentis stili anxietas,
Tac. Or. 39:(Octavius) tragoediam magno impetu exorsus, non succedente stilo, abolevit,
Suet. Aug. 85:affectatione obscurabat stilum,
id. Tib. 70:stili dicendi duo sunt: unus est maturus et gravis, alter ardens erectus et infensus, etc.,
Macr. S. 5, 1; 6, 3.— -
12 stirpesco
stirpesco, ĕre, v. inch. n. [stirps], to run to stalk:asparagus,
Plin. 19, 8, 42, § 149. -
13 גרה II
גֵּרָהII f. ( גרר, v. גִּירָא II) a shoot, stalk (of flax or asparagus). Mekh. Mshp., Nzikin, s.13 המערב את הג׳ בתלתן (Var. גֵּירָה, גררה) he who mixes (other) stalks among stalks of fenugrec; Yalk. Ex. 343; Tosef.B. Kam.VII, 8 גידה ed. Zuck. (Var. גירה, גורה). (Löw Pfl. p. 317: seed of St. Johns bread among seeds of fenugrec. -
14 גֵּרָה
גֵּרָהII f. ( גרר, v. גִּירָא II) a shoot, stalk (of flax or asparagus). Mekh. Mshp., Nzikin, s.13 המערב את הג׳ בתלתן (Var. גֵּירָה, גררה) he who mixes (other) stalks among stalks of fenugrec; Yalk. Ex. 343; Tosef.B. Kam.VII, 8 גידה ed. Zuck. (Var. גירה, גורה). (Löw Pfl. p. 317: seed of St. Johns bread among seeds of fenugrec.
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