Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet DEER'S


DEER'S

Definition av DEER'S

  1. böjningsform av deer

4

Antal bokstäver

6

Är palindrom

Nej

8
DE
DEE
EE
EER
ER
R'
R'S

1

1

95
D'
D'S
DE
DEE


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Exempel på hur man kan använda DEER'S i en mening

  • The coat of arms originally granted for the island province of Öland in 1560 displayed a golden red deer on a blue field and generally resembled Öland's present arms but lacked the deer's red collar and red antlers.
  • Parallels have been drawn to the prehistoric deer skull headdresses from Star Carr in Yorkshire, or the "Sorcerer" cave-painting from Trois-Frères in southern France, as well as references in William Shakespeare's As You Like It to a deer-hunter being awarded the deer's "leather skin and horns to wear", and in Anthony Munday's The Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon to Friar Tuck "carrying a stag's head dauncing", both from the end of the sixteenth century.
  • The common and scientific names are various transcriptions of its local name, which literally translated means "pig-deer" (from Indonesian babi, "pig" + rusa, "deer" – see also Javan rusa) in reference to the huge tusks of the male suggestive of a deer's antlers.
  • Jin dynasty commentator Jin Zhuo provided a more detailed description, saying Feilian had a deer's body with a bird's head, horns, and a snake's tail, with markings like a leopard's spots.
  • The etymology of the species name corresponds to the Latin word inermis meaning unarmed, defenceless—itself constructed from the prefix in- meaning without and the stem arma meaning defensive arms, armor—, and refers to the water deer's lack of antlers.
  • However, feline predators, such as the puma (Puma concolor) and jaguar (Panthera onca), and even the ocelot (Felis pardalis), were once far more prevalent across the deer's range and were likely to have been their main threats.
  • Additionally lungworms and the nasal botfly will enter and parasitize the deer's lungs and nasal passageways.
  • The name may be related to the presence, in the nearby wood, of the hart's-tongue fern (asplenium scolopendrium) called langue de cerf (« cerf-langue ») – English form: deer's tongue ("tongue deer").
  • To cure diseases such as hair loss, Pliny suggests the application of a sow's gall bladder, mixed with bull's urine, or the ashes of an ass's genitals, or other mixtures such as the ashes of a deer's antlers mixed with wine.
  • The upper half of the slab holds two designs: on the left, a long-necked creature similar to that on one of the sides of Monifieth 4; on the right, a deer's head similar to that on the Class I stone at Dunachton and the Class II Glamis Manse stone.
  • They include gold-colored deer's hair (Trichophorum cespitosum), alpine bilberry (Vaccinium uliginosum), lapland rosebay (Rhododendron lapponicum), bearberry willow (Salix uva-ursi), mountain sandwort (Minuartia groenlandica), and alpine holygrass (Hierochloe alpina).
  • Examples include a deer's heart wrapped in caul fat and roasted over a fire, javelina meat boiled inside the animal's own stomach, and more common preparations.
  • The low amount Olearia aborescens makes of a deer's diet may indicate that other ruminants like goats and hind-gut fermenters such as rabbits could have a low impact on Olearia arborescens.
  • These are the forehead glands (on the forehead), the preorbital glands (below the eyes), the nasal glands (inside the nostrils), the interdigital glands (between the toes), the preputial gland (inside the foreskin of the deer's penis), the metatarsal glands (outside of the hind legs), and the tarsal glands (located inside of the hind legs).


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