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Bine   Listen
Bine

noun
1.
European twining plant whose flowers are used chiefly to flavor malt liquors; cultivated in America.  Synonyms: common hop, common hops, European hop, Humulus lupulus.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Bine" Quotes from Famous Books



... and noisy city. The duke lived in Paris, leading the rattling life of a man of the world. He never would sell or let that Madrid house. Perhaps in his heart also, that battered thoroughfare worn by the pattering boots of Ma-bine and the Bois, and the Quartier Breda, there was a green spot sacred to memory and silence, where no footfall should ever light, where no living voice should ever be heard, shut out from the world and its cares and its pleasures, where ...
— Castilian Days • John Hay

... not been worn since the first decade of the century, and was old-fashioned even then. It was of a fine crimson cloth, and had a tarnished line of lace about the edge and around the flaps of the pockets. Over this glorious garment Joseph wore a sky-bine swallow-tail coat of forgotten fashion, and below it a pair of knee-breeches which, being much too long for him, were adjusted midway about his shrunken calves. A pair of hob-nailed bluchers and a battered straw hat gave a somewhat feeble finish to these magnificences. As the ...
— Aunt Rachel • David Christie Murray

... cruising, one summer’s afternoon, little was his notion his death was near so soon, When a sergeant of the horse police discharged his car-a-bine, And called aloud on Donahoo ...
— The Old Bush Songs • A. B. Paterson

... trellis, tendril, arbor, pergola, bower, bine, cordon, amplectant, capreolate, cirrose, ...
— Putnam's Word Book • Louis A. Flemming

... become the parents of fresh hordes in rapid succession. Hence various kinds of aphides are among the most dreaded plagues of agriculturists. The 'fly,' which Kentish farmers know so well on hops, is an aphis specialised for that particular bine; and, when once it appears in the gardens, it spreads with startling rapidity from one end of the long rows to the other. The phylloxera which has spoilt the French vineyards is a root-feeding form that attacks the vine, and kills or maims the plant terribly, ...
— Falling in Love - With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science • Grant Allen



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