Определение a-bark,-a- в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
- Jesuit's bark
- A medicine for the treatment of malaria prepared from the bark of various Cinchona trees and shrubs. The main active ingredient was quinine
- Winter's bark
- The bark of this tree
- Winter's bark
- A tree (Drimys winteri) native to Chile and Argentina, grown as an ornamental plant for its reddish-brown bark, bright green, fragrant leaves and clusters of creamy white, jasmine-scented flowers
- all bark and no bite
- Full of big talk but lacking action, power, or substance; pretentious
- all bark and no bite
- Describes someone who often says cutting remarks, but actually has a soft personality underneath
- bark
- To girdle
- bark
- The exterior covering of the trunk and branches of a tree; the rind
- bark
- A small sailing vessel, e.g. a pinnace or a fishing smack; a rowing boat or barge
- bark
- An abrupt loud vocal utterance
Fox’s clumsy figure, negligently dressed in blue and buff, seemed unprepossessing; only his shaggy eyebrows added to the expression of his face; his voice would rise to a bark in excitement.
- bark
- The short, loud, explosive sound uttered by a dog
- bark
- Peruvian Bark or Jesuit's bark, the bark of the cinchona from which quinine is produced
- bark
- To abrade or rub off any outer covering from
to bark one’s heel.
- bark
- To make a clamor; to make importunate outcries
Where there is the barking of the belly, there no other commands will be heard, much less obeyed. .
- bark
- A three-masted vessel, having her foremast and mainmast square-rigged, and her mizzenmast schooner-rigged
- bark
- To strip the bark from; to peel
- bark
- A similar sound made by some other animals
- bark
- To speak sharply
The sergeant barked an order.
- bark
- To make a short, loud, explosive noise with the vocal organs (said of animals, especially dogs)
- bark
- a sailing vessel or boat of any kind
Whether my bark went down at sea, Whether she met with gales, .
- bark
- To cover or inclose with bark, or as with bark
bark the roof of a hut.
- bark beetle
- any of various beetles, of the subfamily Scolytinae, many of which reproduce in the inner bark of trees
- bark mixture
- Any of various decoctions of bark used as various remedies
- bark mixture
- Any of various preparations of the bark of various trees, used as a growing medium for orchids etc
- bark up the wrong tree
- To do, believe, or pursue something wrong or inappropriate; to take the wrong approach; to follow a false lead; to blame or rebuke the wrong person
After three failed marriages I realised that I may have been barking up the wrong tree and should abandon the search for the perfect wife.
- one's bark is worse than one's bite
- The individual acts threatening but is relatively harmless
Its bark is worse than its bite.
- ring-bark
- The area of the tree from which the bark has been removed by ring-barking
- ring-bark
- To girdle a tree; to kill a tree by removing a ring of bark
Six or eight inches above this graft the stem should be ring-barked, but leaves above the ring-bark left for shade for two or three weeks .
- ring-bark
- The bark removed by ring-barking
- the dogs bark, but the caravan goes on
- Life goes on, even if some will try to stop or talk against progress
- throw in the bark
- To administer quinine
An emetic was prescribed, a perspiration broke out, and I now, with an air of confidence, began to throw in the bark, quite sanguine in my expectations of soon checking this formidable disease.
- throwing in the bark
- Present participle of throw in the bark
- tree bark
- all the tissues of a tree external to the vascular cambium; includes epidermis, cortex and phloem
- bark
- A three-masted vessel, having her foremast and mainmast square-rigged, and her mizzenmast schooner- rigged
- bark
- Formerly, any small sailing vessel, as a pinnace, fishing smack, etc
- bark
- also, a rowing boat; a barge
- bark
- the sound made by a dog
- bark
- Now applied poetically to a sailing vessel or boat of any kind
- bark
- a ship with square rigged sails on the main and fore masts and fore-and-aft sails the mizzenmast
- bark
- An uncommon practice for most of us Used wisely, you can scare the CRAPOLA out of unsuspecting people Best use is for you black Chows in the dark Stand still and watch people get close then suddenly BARK Then, watch out for the smell of soiled human pants
- bark
- To make a short, loud, explosive noise with the vocal organs; said of some animals, but especially of dogs
- bark
- {n} the rind or coat of a tree, a small ship
- bark
- {v} to make a noise, clamor, strip trees
- bark
- An interval of frequency equal to a critical band width
- all bark and no bite
- When someone talks tough but really isn't, they are all bark and no bite
- bark
- remove the bark of a tree cover with bark
- bark
- The short, loud, explosive sound uttered by a dog; a similar sound made by some other animals
- bark up the wrong tree
- Make a wrong assumption about something, look in the wrong place. - The police are barking up the wrong tree in their investigation of that person. - If you expect money from him, you're barking up the wrong tree
- Angostura bark
- the bitter bark of a South American tree; used in medicines and liqueurs and bitters
- The Bark of Dante
- {i} famous painting by Eugene Delacroix that can be seen at the Louvre Museum
- angostura bark
- An aromatic bark used as a tonic, obtained from a South American of the rue family (Galipea cusparia, or officinalis)
- angustura bark
- See Angostura bark
- bark
- An older term used to describe the decarburized skin that develops on steel bars heated in a non-protective atmosphere
- bark
- To cover or inclose with bark, or as with bark; as, to bark the roof of a hut
- bark
- 138 : a small sailing ship : a sailing ship of three or more masts with the aft most mast fore-and-aft rigged and the others square-rigged : a craft propelled by sails or oars
- bark
- Areas of fiber from outside a tree
- bark
- remove the bark of a tree
- bark
- Outermost layers of a woody stem, including all the living and non-living tissues outside the cambium
- bark
- a noise resembling the bark of a dog
- bark
- the stuff on the outside of wood Bark is not actually wood! Its main job is to protect the wood
- bark
- The living tissue outside the vascular cambium in a woody stem It is composed of phloem tissues, which occur as living inner and dead outer zones
- bark
- cover with bark
- bark
- tan (a skin) with bark tannins
- bark
- The tough exterior covering of a woody root or stem that protects the tree from injury caused by insects and other animals, by other plants, by disease and by fire
- bark
- A small sailing ship
- bark
- See Girdle, v
- bark
- {i} outer covering of a tree; sound made by a dog; sharp loud cough; sound of a gunshot; type of sailboat
- bark
- The skin or covering of branches and roots of a tree
- bark
- to be barking up the wrong tree: see tree. In woody plants, tissues outside of the vascular cambium. The term is also used more popularly to refer to all tissues outside the wood. The inner soft bark is produced by the vascular cambium; it consists of secondary phloem (food-conducting) tissue whose innermost layer transports food from the leaves to the rest of the plant. The layered outer bark contains cork and old, dead phloem. The bark is usually thinner than the woody part of the stem or root. bark beetle bark painting barking deer
- bark
- In Aubrey's time barque meant barque-rigged, i e fore and aft on the mizzen
- bark
- outward covering of the tree
- bark
- When a dog barks, it makes a short, loud noise, once or several times. Don't let the dogs bark A small dog barked at a seagull he was chasing. Bark is also a noun. The Doberman let out a string of roaring barks
- bark
- Peruvian Bark or Jesuits bark, the bark of the cinchona from which quinine is produced
- bark
- If you say that someone's bark is worse than their bite, you mean that they seem much more unpleasant or hostile than they really are. She can be a bit tetchy but her bark is worse than her bite
- bark
- An older term used to describe the decarburized skin that develops on steel bars heated in a non‑protective atmosphere
- bark
- {f} make a dog-like cry; speak harshly and loudly; remove bark from a tree
- bark
- Bark is the tough material that covers the outside of a tree
- bark
- tough protective covering of the woody stems and roots of trees and other woody plants
- bark
- n The protective outer layer of the roots, trunk and branches of a tree or woody plants Bark may be thick and rough or thin, smooth and papery
- bark
- basically a regular kid
- bark
- a sailing ship with 3 (or more) masts the sound made by a dog a noise resembling the bark of a dog tough protective covering of the woody stems and roots of trees and other woody plants tan (a skin) with bark tannins speak in an unfriendly tone; "She barked into the dictaphone"
- bark
- a sailing ship with 3 (or more) masts
- bark
- speak in an unfriendly tone; "She barked into the dictaphone"
- bark
- Specifically, Peruvian bark
- bark
- To abrade or rub off any outer covering from; as to bark one's heel
- bark
- Technically, the tissue comprised of phloem, phelloderm, cork cambium, and cork external of the vascular cambium Bark occurs in plants that have secondary growth
- bark
- If you bark at someone, you shout at them aggressively in a loud, rough voice. I didn't mean to bark at you A policeman held his gun in both hands and barked an order
- bark
- make barking sounds; "The dogs barked at the stranger"
- bark at the moon
- protest in vain, protest to no end
- bark beetle
- Any of various small cylindrical beetles of the family Scolytidae that burrrow along the surface wood directly beneath the bark of trees, causing extensive damage. Any member of the beetle family Scolytidae, many of which severely damage trees. Bark beetles are cylindrical, brown or black, and usually less than 0.25 in. (6 mm) long. A male and females (as many as 60 females with each male) bore into a tree and form a chamber where each female deposits her eggs. The emerging larvae bore away from the chamber, forming a characteristic series of tunnels. Different species attack particular trees, damaging roots, stems, seeds, or fruits. Some species transmit disease (e.g., elm bark beetles carry spores of the fungal Dutch elm disease)
- bark beetle
- A small beetle of many species (family Scolytidæ), which in the larval state bores under or in the bark of trees, often doing great damage
- bark beetle
- small beetle that bores tunnels in the bark and wood of trees; related to weevils
- bark beetle
- small beetle that digs tunnels in the bark of trees
- bark louse
- An insect of the family Coccidæ, which infests the bark of trees and vines
- bark louse
- any of several insects living on the bark of plants
- bark painting
- Abstract and figurative designs applied to nonwoven fabric made from bark. Also called tapa, the pieces are made by scratching or painting the designs. The most popular material is the inner bark of the paper mulberry tree. The bark is stripped off, soaked, and beaten until it is thin. Today hand-painted bark cloth is made in northern Australia, New Guinea, and parts of Melanesia. Styles and imagery vary by location, from naturalistic and stylized representations of human and animal forms to mythical beings, spirals, circles, and abstract motifs
- bark up the wrong tree
- make an error; make a claim to the incorrect person
- bark-louse
- any of several insects living on the bark of plants
- birch bark
- a canoe made with the bark of a birch tree
- cabbage bark
- tree with shaggy unpleasant-smelling toxic bark and yielding strong durable wood; bark and seeds used as a purgative and vermifuge and narcotic
- calisaya bark
- A valuable kind of Peruvian bark obtained from the Cinchona Calisaya, and other closely related species
- cartagena bark
- Colombian tree; source of Cartagena bark (a cinchona bark)
- cascarilla bark
- aromatic bark of cascarilla; used as a tonic and for making incense
- cassia bark
- aromatic bark of the cassia-bark tree; less desirable as a spice than Ceylon cinnamon bark
- cinchona bark
- medicinal bark of cinchona trees; source of quinine and quinidine
- cinnamon bark
- cinnamon: aromatic bark used as a spice
- cinnamon bark
- aromatic bark of Saigon cinnamon used medicinally as a carminative
- dog's bark
- sound a dog makes
- elm bark beetle
- Either of two bark beetles (Scolytus multistriatus or Hylurgopinus rufipes) that transmit the fungus causing Dutch elm disease
- his bark is worse than his bite
- he looks or sounds scarier than he really is
- mancona bark
- See Sassy bark
- quillaia bark
- A roll of dried bark; as, a quill of cinnamon or of cinchona
- quillaia bark
- To wind on a quill, as thread or yarn
- quillaia bark
- A hollow spindle
- quillaia bark
- To plaint in small cylindrical ridges, called quillings; as, to quill aruffle
- quillaia bark
- Something having the form of a quill The fold or plain of a ruff
- quillaia bark
- A spindle, or spool, as of reed or wood, upon which the thread for the woof is wound in a shuttle
- quillaia bark
- The bark is finely laminated, and very heavy with alkaline substances, and is
- quillaia bark
- The bark of a rosaceous tree (Quillaja Saponaria), native of Chili
- quillaia bark
- The bark is finely laminated, and very heavy with alkaline substances, and is used commonly by the Chilians instead of soap
- quillaia bark
- Also called soap bark
- red bark
- bark that is reddish in color containing quinine and produced by a cinchona tree
- sassy bark
- The bark of a West African leguminous tree Erythrophlæum Guineense, used by the natives as an ordeal poison, and also medicinally; called also mancona bark
- spruce bark beetle
- small beetle that likes to bore through the bark of spruce trees and eat the cambrium which eventually kills the tree; "the spruce bark beetle is the major tree-killing insect pest of Alaska spruce forests
- winter's bark
- South American evergreen tree yielding winter's bark and a light soft wood similar to basswood aromatic bark having tonic and stimulant properties
- winters bark
- Causing joy or pleasure; gladsome; pleasant
- winters bark
- Winsome
- winters bark
- The period of decay, old age, death, or the like
- winters bark
- To pass the winter; to hibernate; as, to winter in Florida
- winters bark
- A windrow
- winters bark
- The season of the year in which the sun shines most obliquely upon any region; the coldest season of the year
- winters bark
- The characteristic of being winsome; attractiveness of manner
- winters bark
- To keep, fee
- winters bark
- The aromatic bark of tree (Drimys, or Drymis, Winteri) of the Magnolia family, which is found in Southern Chili
- winters bark
- It was first used as a cure for scurvy by its discoverer, Captain John Winter, vice admiral to sir Francis Drake, in 1577
- winters bark
- Cheerful; merry; gay; light-hearted
- winters bark
- One who, or that which, winnows; specifically, a winnowing machine
- winters bark
- The act of one who, or that which, winnows