b ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bk bl bm bn bo bp br bs bt bu bw bx by

Перевод: badger speek badger


[прилагательное]
барсучий;
[существительное]
барсук ; кисть из волоса барсука;
[глагол]
травить; дразнить; изводить; надоедать


Тезаурус:

  1. Billy the Badger had much more difficulty in proving his innocence, although he admitted to stealing chickens.
  2. When, worn down at last, he mentioned a man who lived as far away as Prudhoe, the polite picked up a young fellow known as Billy the Badger, which apparently had nothing to do with his poaching activities, but was given him because he always wore a white muffler, the ends tucked into his trouser tops, and on Sundays, when he wore his best, which was a black coat and trousers, his pointed face above this ensemble roughly depicted the night creature of the woods.
  3. The bovine TB bacterium was first isolated from a badger in June 1971, some 20 years after farmers in Cornwall had been ridiculed for suggesting that badgers were involved in the spread of TB to cattle.
  4. "And," continued the badger ceremoniously, "I am sure I speak for the entire population in wishing you all the very best in driving away this menace in our midst.
  5. They would also use Badger bombers and strategic missiles such as the SS-11 and SS-19 the latter carries warheads as big as five megatons).
  6. The bill will also stop landowners and developers from bulldozing badger setts.
  7. Badger cub meles meles born at the beginning of the year are leaving their family setts now and digging out their own homes.
  8. Its set is a mechanised top hat, with road or river running round its rim, while the crown falls to become the countryside or corkscrews upwards to reveal the womblike houses of Rat, Mole, or Badger.
  9. On the personality scene, Paul Ross's Jack Russell terrier Blencathra Badger won at Crufts and Doug Scott (north Cumbria based) drove off the road and into the river when looking for Grey Mare's Tail.
  10. The new presumption of guilt is most explicit in the 1985 Wildlife and Countryside Act: "If, in any proceedings for an offence, there is evidence from which it could reasonably be concluded that the accused was digging for a badger, he shall be presumed to have been digging for a badger unless the contrary is shown."
  11. The other approach is to let the TB take its course in the badger population and compensate farmers for losses they may suffer as a result of TB spreading to their cattle from the badgers.
  12. The handsome badger drew himself up, full height.
  13. If you would like details of how to help badgers in your area, contact the National Federation of Badger Groups

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