Anagrammeja & Tietoja | englanti sana GLEANS


GLEANS

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Kirjeiden luku määrä

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On Palindromi

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Esimerkkejä GLEANS käyttämisestä lauseessa

  • The black-throated blue warbler more often hovers rather than gleans its prey because it is more difficult to glean among thick understory foliage.
  • It perches on a high watchpoint from which it sallies forth to catch insects in mid-flight or off plants using a range of aerobatic maneuvers, and occasionally gleans prey from the vegetation.
  • There are interviews with, among others, a Michelin 2-star chef who gleans and a wealthy restaurant owner whose ancestors were gleaners; the owners of a few vineyards, among whom are psychoanalyst Jean Laplanche and the great-grandson of physiologist and chronophotographer Étienne-Jules Marey; artists that incorporate recycled materials into their work, including Louis Pons, who explains that junk is a "cluster of possibilities"; lawyers who discuss the French laws regarding gleaning versus abandoned property; and an urban gleaner named Alain, who has a master's degree and teaches French to immigrants.
  • " Liz Beardsworth of Empire gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and wrote "Freundlich’s retread gleans new colour thanks to his sparkling dialogue, the urbane New York setting and great work from his superior cast, all of whom flesh out their roles so that empathy with their respective plights comes easily.
  • In South and Southeast Asia, for example, the mountain tailorbird is often found gleaning in thickets and stands of bamboo, Abbott's babbler gleans lower-storey foliage in lowland forest, the rufous-chested flycatcher and brown fulvetta are birds of the mid-storey forest, the yellow-breasted warbler gleans in the mid- to upper-storey, and the greater green leafbird specializes in the upper-storey forest.
  • It gleans much of its prey such as caterpillars from leaves and branches but it also hawks termite alates, sallying into the air from a perch to which it returns to feed on any prey caught.
  • It clambers and hops along horizontal branches as it acrobatically gleans its prey from dead leaves, debris, epiphytes, and moss.
  • It clambers and hops along horizontal branches as it acrobatically gleans its prey from foliage, epiphytes, and moss.
  • It probes for and gleans its prey from bark, vegetation, lichens, and moss while hitching acrobatically along trunks and branches.
  • It gleans its prey acrobatically from bark and live and dead leaves while hitching along branches and sometimes trunks.
  • It acrobatically probes for and gleans prey from bark, moss, epiphytes, dead leaves, and debris while hitching along small branches, sometimes hanging upside down.
  • It acrobatically gleans prey from bark, lichens, mosses, and epiphytes as it hitches and climbs along small branches from the forest's understorey to its canopy.
  • It acrobatically gleans prey from bark and debris as it hitches along small branches high in the forest's subcanopy and canopy.
  • It acrobatically gleans prey from bark and debris as it hitches and climbs along small branches from the forest's mid-storey to its subcanopy.
  • It acrobatically gleans prey from bark and dead leaves (and occasionally live ones) while hitching along small branches.
  • It acrobatically hitches up trunks and along limbs using its tail for support, and gleans prey from bark, moss, and epiphytes, often while hanging upside down.
  • The grey tit-flycatcher can be distinguished from the present species by a combination of its white-edged dark tail and foraging behaviour; the grey tit-flycatcher gleans insects from leaves, compared to the ashy flycatcher's more active method of sallying for insects.
  • It mostly gleans prey from live foliage and also takes prey from clusters of dead leaves, vine tangles, and along branches by gleaning, reaching, lunging, and with short sallies from a perch.
  • It takes prey mostly by striking upward to foliage from a perch; it also gleans while perched, briefly hovers to glean, and makes sallies to take prey on the wing.
  • It actively gleans from grass, reeds, and leaves mostly by reaching and lunging; it sometimes makes short jumps or brief sallies from a perch to reach the underside of leaves.
  • Like all trogons, Whitehead's trogon feeds primarily on insects, which it captures in sallying flight from a perch, or gleans from foliage.



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