Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Secure the long bullrush leaves around the pond, sticking on with a little fondant.
It was a far cry from the kind of final-round bullrush that Norman has long been celebrated for.
His lean body shook like a bullrush.
It is distinctive for the tree islands of shrubbery, trees and wetland plants like bullrush.
The lake is ringed with cattail and bullrush, except for the occasional boat, dock, or seawall.
For this reason, it has been referred to as 'colonel', as the rings of dried bullrush resemble the stripes on a colonel's uniform.
Bulrush or bullrush is the common name of a variety of wetland plants, typically in the sedge family (Cyperaceae).
In other variations, the single player can call a 'bullrush' at any time by shouting 'bullrush', brave (or foolish) ones will cross alone first.
Great reedmace Typha latifolia or bullrush is common along canals, slow-moving rivers and pond edges, spreading by seeds and by creeping underground stems.
A Balsa is a boat or ship built by various pre-Columbian South American civilizations constructed from woven reeds of the Totora bullrush.
Today, a healthy mixture of bullrush, cattails, wild rice, sedge grass, marsh flea bane and marsh mellow (a type of hibiscus) has been restored.
The name Yangebup was first recorded in 1841 and may be derived from the Aboriginal word, Yanget, for the species of native flax or bullrush found around the lake.
These plants are known in British English as bulrush, bullrush or reedmace, and in American English as cattail or punks.
Inspired by the use of plants, like the bullrush, in waste-water treatment, researchers at the John C. Stennis Space Center in Mississippi turned to what gardeners and plant enthusiasts had long believed.
Seduced by an advance screening, Mr. Falwell has given "Prince of Egypt" - described by Variety as an animated life of Moses "from bullrush to exodus" - two thumbs up.
'Bullrush' and 'Remember How We Started'are swirling, finely balanced mixtures of the delicate and the insistent (and 'Bullrush'has this great stupid bit nicked off 'I Am The Walrus').
Wild angelica, Reedmace (bullrush), yellow meadow vetchling, Yorkshire fog grass, Tussock grass, and Meadowsweet were also noted and Brooklime speedwell grows within the ditch of the Joppa Burn inflow.
As the day of the party drew nearer, carts drawn by sturdy plow-goats rolled through the bullrush gates of Boggietown, laden with boxes and crates, each bearing the X-rune of Goodgulf the Wizard and various elvish brand names.
And on the east side (if you can use such global words for such a small space) aquatic grasses - striped bullrush (Scirpus tabernaemontani zebrinus) and Iris laevigata variegata, a broad white and gray-green iris that likes wet feet - rose up out of the water.
By 1909, a general store and other buildings had been erected on private land, and in 1912, the Government finally acceded to the request, naming the town "Killili" after a local Aboriginal word meaning "bullrush" following the Surveyor General's request for a "euphonious native name".
As a game of physical contact that results in a mêlée of people attempting to drag others down to the ground, bullrush bears some similarity to a rugby scrum which may explain the presence of the game amongst children in a nation beloved of the sport of rugby.