Anagramas & Información sobre | Palabra Inglés BERRIES


BERRIES

4

Número de letras

7

Es palíndromo

No

12
BE
BER
ER
ERR
ES
IE
IES
RI
RIE
RR

1

244

254

214
BE
BEE
BER

Ejemplos de uso de BERRIES en una oración

  • The majority of natural dyes are derived from non-animal sources such as roots, berries, bark, leaves, wood, fungi and lichens.
  • Vitamin C (also known as ascorbic acid and ascorbate) is a water-soluble vitamin found in citrus and other fruits, berries and vegetables.
  • It is traditionally flavoured with peppercorns, but modern versions can also contain pistachios or, less commonly, myrtle berries.
  • They changed course, and landed in a country of large rivers, pine trees, and berries, believed to be Labrador.
  • Typically, berries are juicy, rounded, brightly colored, sweet, sour or tart, and do not have a stone or pit, although many pips or seeds may be present.
  • The family is economically important as the berries of Vitis species, commonly known as grapes, are an important fruit crop and, when fermented, produce wine.
  • European mistletoe has smooth-edged, oval, evergreen leaves borne in pairs along the woody stem, and waxy, white berries that it bears in clusters of two to six.
  • According to the Bibliotheca, their great-grandfather was Dionysus, and he gave them the power to change water into wine, grass into wheat, and berries into olives.
  • Its omnivorous diet consists mainly of roots, leaves, berries, nectar, and insects, but also includes carrion.
  • In ancient times, the woodlands contained a great deal of timber, but Native Americans burned them periodically to encourage the growth of berries.
  • Initially, the settlers hunted predominantly bison and antelope, but after the game migrated out of the region, the native people became dependent on gathering various roots, berries, and nuts, and harvesting fish.
  • It was named by the early drovers of sheep who passed through the region while en route to market in Tuscumbia, and whose sheep encountered a thorny plant growing in abundance in that area and known locally by the name hack burrs (often corrupted to "hack berries") and which same plants were often fatal to sheep, besides being destructive to their wool.
  • Fish, crab, moose, beluga whale, caribou, seal, rabbit, geese, cranes, ducks, ptarmigan (including their eggs), berries, greens, and roots are also primary subsistence food sources.
  • Early settlers found prosperity by growing fruit, including apples and a variety of berries, and raising chickens.
  • They lived on a diet of corn meal, acorns, seeds and herbs, fish, venison, berries, fruits and other small animals.
  • Besides hunting, they also consumed pinyon nuts, mesquite beans, screw-beans, juniper berries and seeds.
  • Important plant foods for the Tataviam included yucca stalks and hearts, acorns, sage seeds, juniper and holly leaf cherry berries.
  • At the time of European encounter, this area was inhabited by the Ais Indians, who gathered palmetto, cocoplum and seagrape berries.
  • During the Civil War, berries were hand-picked, hand-canned and soldered for shipping to the Union Army.
  • Indian Land Deed Archives record that the land was used for hunting, fishing and collecting wild staples, such as chestnuts, hopniss (Indian potato, Apios americana), blackberries, blueberries, service berries, sunflower root, and for cutting timber.
  • Boats would enter Lake Harbor and make a trip around the lake picking up crates of berries at the docks of the growers.
  • The areas east and west of town, however, are prime for corn, soybeans, wheat, sunflowers, oats, barley, sugar beets (to the west of Fertile), berries, hay, potatoes, vegetables, and much more.
  • The first residents of what would become Egg Harbor Township were the Lenni Lenape Native Americans, who would spend their summers on the elevated land around the cedar swamp that is now Bargaintown Lake, as well as along the banks of Patcong Creek, where they made use of the abundant fish, shellfish, wild berries, and bird's eggs in the area and collected shells that could be carved to make wampum.
  • The name Pembina derives from an Ojibwe word for Viburnum edule, a bushy plant with bright red berries which grows in the area.
  • Their diet included salmon, mussels, lampreys, berries, wild mustard, camas, grouse, beaver, deer, and elk.



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