undergrowth

  • 121Magners — For the English Bulmers cider brand, see H. P. Bulmer. A 330ml bottle of Magners cider. Magners (or Bulmers) is a brand of cider produced in County Tipperary, in Ireland, by the C C Group. The Magners product range includes the cider varieties:… …

    Wikipedia

  • 122Red-winged Fairywren — Male in nuptial plumage, Margaret River, Western Australia Conservation status …

    Wikipedia

  • 123Список телесериалов/Латиница — BBC воскресенье: Ночной театр (BBC Sunday Night Theatre), Великобритания, 1950 1960 BBC: 80 чудес света (Around the World in 80 Treasures), Великобритания, с 2005 BBC: Аттила (Heroes and Villains: Attila the Hun), Великобритания, Греция, 2008 BBC …

    Википедия

  • 124gaydar — (GAY.dar) n. An intuitive sense that enables someone to identify whether another person is gay. Example Citations: I think my Gaydar is broken. If you are someone other than a straight female living in Sydney, you may require a translation.… …

    New words

  • 125brush — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. thicket, scrub, shrubbery; broom. v. sweep; graze. See cleanness, roughness, touch, painting, contention. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A brushing instrument] Common types of brushes include: bristle, fiber …

    English dictionary for students

  • 126underbrush — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. bush, thicket, brake, bracken, scrub, shrubbery, boscage; furze, gorse, heather. See vegetable. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. thicket, brush, brushwood, boscage, jungle, undergrowth, tangle, copse, coppice …

    English dictionary for students

  • 127dense — 01. It took us hours to hike through the [dense] undergrowth of the forest to the beach. 02. Earth s atmosphere is 1000 times less [dense] than water. 03. The fog was so [dense] that we had to stop the car and wait for it to clear. 04. The dry… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 128brush — {{11}}brush (n.1) dust sweeper, a brush for sweeping, late 14c., also, c.1400, brushwood, brushes; from O.Fr. broisse (Mod.Fr. brosse) a brush (13c.), perhaps from V.L. *bruscia a bunch of new shoots (used to sweep away dust), perhaps from P.Gmc …

    Etymology dictionary