The evergreen ivy is a rippling carpet, the twining honeysuckle a living basketry texture. |
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Such protofilaments merge and intertwist, yielding thin fibrils, which are capable of further association and twining, producing mature amyloid. |
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Fiveleaf akebia is a vigorous vine that grows as a groundcover and climbs shrubs and trees by twining. |
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She was a moderately young woman with long fair hair twining around a gaudy hairpin. |
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He likes to have her lie down with him on the bed and tell him stories, while he plays with her hair, twining it around his small fingers. |
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I wrapped my arms around his neck, twining my fingers in his chocolaty gold waves. |
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They are more than just dense clumps of various kinds of trees, creepers, grasses, bushes, shrubs and twining creepers. |
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Although described as of trailing or twining habit, my plants have grown upright, with neat stiff stems that need no support. |
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Black and red curtains draped gracefully to the floor, resplendent with fierce twining dragons. |
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It was also mentioned that the G 8 countries are committed to educational twining which could provide a source of financing. |
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The twining leaf tendrils will attach themselves to wires or other plants. |
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The nutpick occurs with two different handles, one of which, Number 7, is a shortened version of Number 6 minus the bird, twining vine, and ivy leaves at the join. |
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An evergreen twining climber, it bears long racemes of lobster-claw like flowers of a luminescent bluey-green and hangs like Chinese lanterns from the vine. |
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The artist employed the technique of spaced alternate-pair weft twining to create the bag. |
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This twining tendril becomes transformed at its tip into a pitcher that is held upright. |
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European Commission support will be provided through facilitation activities like TAIEX workshops or twining projects. |
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Carved vines snaked their way up the posts, twining round the dark ebony. |
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But the reason for sitting like a twining vine might not be feminine demureness. |
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This program follows the Declaration of Intent on the formulation of twining agreements between Basin Organizations, signed in the Hague on 20 March 2000 during the World Water Forum. |
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Once a heddled loom is used, the spiraling encircling action of twining is no longer feasible. |
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All twining plants exhibit handedness, which scientists term chirality, but botanists believe it has nothing to do with which hemisphere they grow in, but rather is an inborn tendency that varies by species. |
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In addition to their twining character, some tendrils produce terminal enlargements that, on contact with a firm surface, flatten and secrete an adhesive, firmly cementing the tendril to the substrate. |
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Far better to recall scraps clumsily, but with affection. A mud-caked waist-slipOne way and another, love and literature did indeed keep twining together. |
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Both types climb by twining around supports. |
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Members of Liliales are typically perennial erect or twining herbs, though in some cases woody shrubs, with fleshy to fibrous stems arising from any of various types of underground storage or perennating organs. |
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Connaraceae, family of dicotyledonous flowering plants within the order Oxalidales, and containing 25 genera of trees, shrubs, and shrubby, twining climbers distributed in tropical regions of the world. |
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A CENIA twining project has been finished which was supposed to contribute to a quality information flow among those who collect, process and use information on the environment. |
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A typical border has a layered look and consists of trees with vines twining up their trunks, then a strip of small trees and shrubs, followed by a field or other open area. |
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The most simple type of twined textile consists of bags in which parallel warps of basswood fibre are held together by spaced wefts of twining using nettle or cotton threads. |
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A dense whorl of many leaves would apparently be incommodious for a twining plant. |
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In a bathetic last stanza, the parish clerk comes along and cuts down the twining branches. |
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The easiest and most attractive way to support twining and vining plants is with one of the new handcrafted trellises that are available by mail. |
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The genus Kadsura, which belongs to the economically and medicinally important family Schisandraceae, consists of 16 species of scandent and twining woody vines. |
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Twining snapdragon winds through the Calhoun's ocotillo fence and license plate collection. |
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