Concept cluster: Tools > Peatlands
v
To sprinkle flour and salt and drip butter or fat on, as on meat in roasting.
n
Water in which beans have been cooked.
n
area of peatland where peat covers large expanses of undulating ground, forming where there is a climate of high rainfall and a low level of evapotranspiration
n
A fertilizer made from the refuse of oil mills.
n
Alternative form of boscage [A place set with trees or mass of shrubbery, a grove or thicket.]
n
A kind of whitish, poorly drained soil with small black concretions.
n
(obsolete, dialect) A piece of peat, or a turf, particularly when dried for use as fuel.
n
(dialectal) The cleft or fork of a tree; crotch.
v
(horticulture) To cover the drain holes of a planter with stones or similar material, in order to ensure proper drainage.
n
(UK, Dartmoor) A bog covered by a layer of moss, presenting a hazard to walkers.
n
The insoluble waste products of the Leblanc process.
n
(Antarctica, uncountable) The accretion of snow on hair and fur.
n
(uncountable, slang) Noise on an A-scope or similar type of radar display.
n
A mud formed from the partial decay of peat.
n
Obsolete form of eagre. [a tidal bore]
n
An instance of kettling; a group of protesters or rioters confined in a limited area.
n
boiling in a kier
n
Alternative form of muskeg [(Canada) A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce.]
n
(mechanics, informal) Accidental emulsion of oil and water in an engine.
n
Peat processed for power plant fuel by scraping it off the surface of bog and drying in situ.
adj
Covered with moguls (skiing bumps).
n
An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a heath
n
peat obtained from below the surface of a bog
n
Land abounding in peat bogs.
v
(cooking) To incorporate fat, especially butter, into (a dish, especially a sauce to finish it).
n
(New Zealand) Synonym of bottomland: lowland plains and/or farms.
n
(Canada) A terrain composed of peat bog with tussocky meadow and woody vegetation including spruce.
n
(geomorphology) A hummock rising out of a bog with a core of ice; similar in appearance to a pingo but due to different structure palsas cannot grow as big as pingos.
n
Soil formed of dead but not fully decayed plants found in bog areas, often burned as fuel.
n
a bog in which the soil is formed from peat.
n
Alternative form of peat bog [a bog in which the soil is formed from peat.]
n
Alternative form of peat moss [sphagnum.]
n
A peat bog.
n
Alternative form of pocosin [(US) A low, wooded swamp in (especially coastal) Eastern Maryland or Virginia; a palustrine wetland with deep, acidic peat soils.]
n
(US) A low, wooded swamp in (especially coastal) Eastern Maryland or Virginia; a palustrine wetland with deep, acidic peat soils.
n
Alternative form of pocosin [(US) A low, wooded swamp in (especially coastal) Eastern Maryland or Virginia; a palustrine wetland with deep, acidic peat soils.]
n
(US, northeastern dialects) A marsh.
n
Alternative form of pocosin [(US) A low, wooded swamp in (especially coastal) Eastern Maryland or Virginia; a palustrine wetland with deep, acidic peat soils.]
v
(transitive) To put (a plant) into a pot
n
(dated, dialectal) A thicket; a small wood or grove.
n
(Ireland, Scotland) A ditch, especially a field boundary ditch usually used to drain fields and mark their boundaries.
n
A pocosin with relatively short trees, deep peat, and fewer soil nutrients.
n
(agriculture) Waste matter from tanks, especially the dried nitrogenous residue from tanks in which fat has been rendered, used as a fertilizer.
n
A preparation of peat for use as fuel.
n
(Ireland) an area in a peat bog from which turf is cut as fuel.
n
(usually in the plural) Land that is covered mostly with water, with occasional marshy and soggy areas.
n
Any dried-out grass leaf or stalk in a field

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