drift-wood

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drift-wood
@@@LINK=driftwood Oxford English Dictionary
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drift-wood
drift-woodn [U] wood floating on the sea or washed ashore by it 浮木, 漂木(在海上漂流或被海水冲上岸的木头). 牛津英汉双解词典
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Rose Porter
Porter's first success was Summer Drift-Wood for the Winter Fire (1870). Drift-wood". (1874) (text) The Years that are Told (1875) (text) A Song and a Sigh (1877) (text) In the Mist (1879) (text) Charity, Sweet Charity wikipedia.org
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driftwood
drift-wood, ˈdriftwood 1. Wood floating on, or cast ashore by, the water. Esp. wood carried down by a river. Formerly freq. U.S.[1613 Purchas Pilgrimage (1614) 743 They have no wood but drift.] 1633 T. James Voy. 26 There was great store of drift wood. 1780 Coxe Russ. Disc. 42 Forobieff built anothe... Oxford English Dictionary
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Chukou Nature Center
It also features drift-wood storage, eco-waterways and greenhouses. wikipedia.org
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Vaygach Island
Some of their sacrificial piles, consisting of drift-wood, deer's horns and the skulls of bears and deer, have been observed by travellers. wikipedia.org
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snoodle
snoodle, v. dial. (chiefly north.) or nursery. Now rare. (ˈsnuːd(ə)l) [See Eng. Dial. Dict.: prob. rel. to snudge v.2, snuggle v., etc.] intr. To snuggle, nestle. Also trans.1887 in T. Darlington Folk-Speech S. Cheshire 355. 1898 R. Dottie Rambles & Recoll. ‘{oqq}R{cqq} Dick’ 115 Eaur snug, white ho... Oxford English Dictionary
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The Galaxy (magazine)
Pond, who had been associate editor of the Army and Navy Journal wrote an editorial column (mainly political) called "Drift-Wood" under the name of "Phillip wikipedia.org
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plankless
ˈplankless, a. [f. plank n. + -less.] Having no planks; void or stripped of its planks.1837 Longfellow Drift-Wood Prose Wks. 1886 I. 317 Vikings sitting gaunt and grim on the plankless ribs of their pirate ships. 1865 Carlyle Fredk. Gt. xxi. iv. (1872) X. 40 The Peasant-Noble..clattered with his woo... Oxford English Dictionary
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Joseph Christmas Ives
The difficulties encountered in the canon were of a character to prevent a steamboat from attempting to traverse it at low water, and we had seen drift-wood wikipedia.org
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nones
nones (nəʊnz) Also 5 nonys. [In sense 1, a. F. nones (12th c.), or ad. L. nōnæ (acc. nōnās), fem. pl. of nōnus ninth. In sense 2, pl. of none n.: cf. matins, vespers.] 1. Rom. Antiq. The ninth day (by inclusive reckoning) before the Ides of each month, being thus the 7th of March, May, July, and Oct... Oxford English Dictionary
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Flood of 1851
Farms were covered with drift-wood and other debris, so that the entire work of the season was lost". wikipedia.org
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popehood
popehood (ˈpəʊphʊd) [OE. pápan-hád, f. pápa, pope n.1 + -hád, -hood.] The condition of being pope; the papal dignity.c 1000 ælfric Hom. (Th.) II. 126 Hwæt ða Gregorius, siððan he papan-had underfeng. 1387 Trevisa Higden (Rolls) VII. 85 Þe pope Iohn satte in his popehode sex monthes. c 1449 Pecock Re... Oxford English Dictionary
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Rongorongo text S
Thomson was told that "The large one [S] is a piece of drift-wood, that from its peculiar shape is supposed to have been used as a portion of a canoe". wikipedia.org
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merle
▪ I. merle, n. (mɜːl) Also 6 mirle, meryll, 7–8 mearl(e. [a. F. merle masc. (OF. also fem.):—L. merulus, merula blackbird or ousel (also, the sea-carp). Cf. Pr., Sp. merla, Pg. merlo, melro, It. merla, merlo; also (from Fr.) MDu., MLG., early mod.G. merle, Du. meerle.] 1. The blackbird, Turdus merul... Oxford English Dictionary
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