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1 lettuce
['letis](a type of green plant with large leaves used as a salad.) hlávkový šalát* * *• šalát (hlávkový) -
2 seedling
[-liŋ]noun (a young plant just grown from a seed: Don't walk on the lettuce seedlings!) semenáč* * *• semenác -
3 sow
I [səu] past tense - sowed; verb1) (to scatter over, or put in, the ground: I sowed lettuce in this part of the garden.) (za)siať2) (to plant seed over: This field has been sown with wheat.) zasiaťII noun(a female pig.) sviňa* * *• zasiat• siat• svina• rozsievat• ošípaná• prasnica -
4 tomato
American - tomatoes; noun1) (a type of fleshy, juicy fruit, usually red, used in salads, sauces etc: We had a salad of lettuce, tomatoes and cucumbers; ( also adjective) tomato sauce.)2) (the plant which bears these.)* * *• paradajka
См. также в других словарях:
Lettuce — Taxobox name = Lettuce image width = 260 px image caption = Iceberg lettuce field in Northern Santa Barbara County regnum = Plantae divisio = Magnoliophyta classis = Magnoliopsida ordo = Asterales familia = Asteraceae genus = Lactuca species = L … Wikipedia
lettuce — noun /ˈlɛtɪs/ a) An edible plant, Lactuca sativa and its close relatives, having a head of green and/or purple leaves. I’ll have a ham sandwich with lettuce and tomato. b) The leaves of the lettuce plant, eaten as a vegetable; as a dish often… … Wiktionary
lettuce — noun Etymology: Middle English letuse, from Anglo French letuse, probably from plural of letue lettuce plant, from Latin lactuca, from lact , lac milk; from its milky juice more at galaxy Date: 14th century any of a genus (Lactuca) of composite… … New Collegiate Dictionary
lettuce leaves — leaves of a lettuce plant … English contemporary dictionary
Lettuce — Let tuce (l[e^]t t[i^]s), n. [OE. letuce, prob. through Old French from some Late Latin derivative of L. lactuca lettuce, which, according to Varro, is fr. lac, lactis, milk, on account of the milky white juice which flows from it when it is cut … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Lettuce opium — Lettuce Let tuce (l[e^]t t[i^]s), n. [OE. letuce, prob. through Old French from some Late Latin derivative of L. lactuca lettuce, which, according to Varro, is fr. lac, lactis, milk, on account of the milky white juice which flows from it when it … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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
lettuce — (n.) late 13c., probably from O.Fr. laitues, pl. of laitue lettuce, from L. lactuca lettuce, from lac (gen. lactis) milk (see LACTATION (Cf. lactation)); so called for the milky juice of the plant … Etymology dictionary
lettuce — [let′əs] n. [ME letuse < OFr laituës, pl. of laitue < L lactuca < lac (gen. lactis), milk (see GALACTIC): from its milky juice] 1. any of a genus (Lactuca) of hardy, annual composite plants; specif., a plant ( L. sativa) grown for its… … English World dictionary
lettuce — ► NOUN 1) a cultivated plant with edible leaves that are eaten in salads. 2) used in names of other plants with edible green leaves, e.g. lamb s lettuce. ORIGIN Old French letues, from Latin lactuca, from lac milk (because of its milky juice) … English terms dictionary
Lettuce leaf basil — is a large leaf variety of Ocimum basilicum (sweet basil). The large, crinkled leaves, which grow on the short, wide plant, are sweet, but not as strong as other sweet basils. This makes them particularly suitable for tossing into salads or… … Wikipedia