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shelled    音标拼音: [ʃ'ɛld]
带壳巴豆

带壳巴豆

shelled
adj 1: of animals or fruits that have a shell [ant: {shell-
less}, {unshelled}]


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  • Shelled vs. deshelled - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I don't hear ambiguity with an "already," but try: "I really enjoy these shelled pistachios" - I might interpret that as some pistachios that have shells and where I've got to remove the shells "De-shelled" would resolve the ambiguity for me A similar use of "deshelled" seems to occur when describing other things with shells, like eggs and coconuts (see Google books results)
  • Halloween and shell out - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Growing up in Canada, in addition to "trick-or-treating" as a description of kids' activities on Hallowe'en evening, I often heard the verb "shell out", conjugated as "shelling out" or "shellouting
  • What is the meaning of a shell of its former self?
    There are an awful lot of written instances of {He was a} mere husk shadow of his former {self}, which is effectively exactly the same relatively transparent imagery, but probably has no "etymological" connection to the shell version being queried here So if we define an "idiom" as a usage where the (conventionally established) meaning has to be learned (isn't obvious from the literal wording
  • Ambiguous Nuts or To Shell or not to Shell
    How does one remove the ambiguity of shelled peanuts? Must one just not use the adjective 'shelled' in relation to peanuts, or other nuts, or shellfish?
  • User Fabíola - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
  • Missing from on in The List? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    A list is normally understood as something you put things on, although there are also cases where it may be appropriate to talk of what is in a list (possibly if the list is conceived as an official register or the like) However, when something is missing, it is always missing from the list
  • What is the meaning (and origin) of the word peck in the expression . . .
    3 I’m 75 years young and I remember vividly in Aston Birmingham early 1950s saying do you want to come and play up on the Bomb Peck meaning shelled houses and flattened land
  • What is the origin of the phrase A Mountain Im Willing to Die On?
    The immediate image I had when I saw this question was of the scene in For Whom the Bell Tolls where El Sordo and his youthful companions on a mountain top try to fight off a fascist airplane as it makes a bombing run toward them (I don't believe the phrase "a mountain I'm willing to die on" comes up there or elsewhere in the novel or movie, however ) Then I thought about Ingrid Bergman
  • Term for Every 2 weeks? [duplicate] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Possible Duplicate: Are there any words I can use to disambiguate ldquo;biweekly rdquo;? Is there a term two designate a frequency of "every two weeks", like "weekly" for "every week"
  • Etymology of horny - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Both these foraminiferans (shelled Protozoa) and ammonites (extinct shelled cephalopods) bear spiral shells resembling a ram's, and Ammon's, horns The regions of the hippocampus in the brain are called the cornu ammonis – literally "Amun's Horns", due to the horned appearance of the dark and light bands of cellular layers





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