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Перевод: tree-like
[прилагательное] древовидный
Тезаурус:
- Its tree-like structures provide shelters for the polyps, the anemone-like organisms from whose secretions it is built.
- To retrieve our wooden bowls, two other tree-like structures are necessary: an index to the database allowing us to find all wooden objects quickly without checking every one, and a thesaurus which remembers that "beech", "mahogany" and so on are all forms of wood.
- Even the lowly segmented worms, Annelida , have a place with the ever-popular feathery fan worms and tiny Christmas tree-like serpulid worms.
- Similar in appearance are the cathedral corals, ( Sinularia species) which are often purple in colour, and have fingerlike projections rather thank ridges on the polypary, thus being morphologically halfway between the encrusting leather corals and the bushy, tree-like soft corals, many of which are also species of Sinularia .
- These ferns began to slowly change shape and structure during the Devonian, and some became tall and tree-like.
- This is the only recognition in The Green Book that women play an important part in making links across the tree-like diverging boundaries between groups, and in this respect too Qaddafi's understanding of the way Libyan society works is similar to that of the Zuwaya.
- Ferns, club mosses and gymnosperms continued the tree-like growth of the Devonian period, when a moderate climate became warmer, and this dense foliage locked up the carbon as our present coal deposits, thus increasing even further the oxygen content of the atmosphere.
- Thus the revealed hierarchy of expressions is a tree-like structure with branchings determined in a definite way.
- At present, the most keenly-sought tree-like Acer is one called October Glory, a form of the Canadian red maple.
- These qualities are revealed in the tree-like species grown principally for the striped markings on the trunk, the so-called snakebark type.
- Chomsky and Sampson claim that this tree-like decomposition of a sentence into its parts is a feature common to all human language, and is indeed the basis upon which we determine the meaning of a sentence from the way it is built up out of its parts (an insight going back at least to Frege).
- One can visualise this as a tree-like structure with broad categories branching out into narrower ones.
- An excellent compromise is the progressive-part method (Seymour, 1966) in which parts are learned separately but combined in groups within a tree-like structure which converges on the total task.
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