p pa pb pc pd pe pf pg ph pi pk pl pm pn po pp pr ps pt pu pv pw px py

Перевод: peat speek peat


[прилагательное]
торфяной;
[существительное]
торф ; брикет торфа


Тезаурус:

  1. The oak will certainly be removing many nutrients from the soil so the first thing you should do is dig the area over well and incorporate plenty of organic matter such as well-rotted manure, garden compost, leaf mould or peat.
  2. An invitation to tea in the farmhouse kitchen was an almost unbearable delight; bright cinders glowed in the polished black stove; hot, freshly baked scones, butter, cheese, ten minute fresh eggs, milk from the sombre-eyed cows round the door; the scent of peat smoke, soothing all cares.
  3. Can be used as peat
  4. Wetlands under threat have included a variety of landscapes: swamps of tall reed or reed sweet-grass; marshes of rush and sedge, which sometimes develop into scrub of willow and bog myrtle; fens, whose lush vegetation is nourished by alkaline groundwater, and which range from open pools, often the remains of peat cutting, to grazed beds of meadowsweet and iris, grading in turn to the wet woodlands known as alder "carr"; mires, such as the mosses of the North-West, whose deep peatlands support sphagnum moss and heather, scattered with glades of birch, the favourite haunt of nightjars.
  5. If you need to move lightweight leaves and hedge clippings on the one hand, and hefty bags of peat on the other, then a simple sack barrow may cater for your gardening needs - though they can be awkward to manoeuvre over steps and rough ground.
  6. It isn't just a matter of minor errors, such as including lines that have been torn up, or ending main lines in the middle of peat bogs.
  7. Here the limestone of the Force gives way to peat moorlands pierced by disused coal pits, abandoned long ago but temporarily revived by the villagers during the coal strike of 1926.
  8. Bury then hollow-side up in a tray of moist peat and keep them warm.
  9. Requires more feeding than peat
  10. The original Holme Fen Post at this nature reserve near Peterborough was a cast-iron pillar from the Great Exhibition, driven 22 feet into the peat in 1851 to prove the theory that the Fens were sinking as the water was drained away from them in land reclamation.
  11. Hence the old silt river beds, known in the Fens as "roddons", are rising steadily as ridges above the ever-falling peat.
  12. The Colonel had recalled exciting nights he had spent in the open, round the naphthalene lamp, enticing and trapping moths; he had enthused over bits of bone he had excavated in the peat bog.
  13. Such inadequacies were made far worse by something which Vermuyden could not have foreseen: peat shrinkage.

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