Skip to main content

vine

/vahyn/US // vaɪn //UK // (vaɪn) //

蔓藤,蔓生植物,蔓草,蔓生

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : any plant having a long, slender stem that trails or creeps on the ground or climbs by winding itself about a support or holding fast with tendrils or claspers.
    • : the stem of any such plant.
    • : a grape plant.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Grape vines and Virginia creeper vines are among the best, Margolis finds.

  • Later, when spring comes, the vines don’t have to take time to grow stems and then leaves.

  • So now, while you can still find a few tomatoes clinging to life on the scraggly fall vines, do yourself a favor and whip up a tall BLT first thing in the morning.

  • Ivy vines can be used for party decor, often found at weddings, birthdays or to enhance gazebo or patio displays.

  • These faux ivy vines are constructed out of a mixture of silk and plastic, and have two leaf sizes for a more natural look.

  • I never actually tried to swing from tree vine to tree vine, but I did consider it.

  • Akbar and McCain raced out of the courtroom, recording a celebratory Vine in the elevator.

  • Ayahuasca/yagé is a psychoactive brew made from the Banisteriopsis caapi vine.

  • The vine and the ceremony are deeply entwined with South American indigenous religions of the Amazon.

  • Let a shaman wave vine leaves over her and enforce a little semi-public shaming.

  • This has a warm though a thin soil, which must be highly favorable to the Vine to induce so exclusive a devotion to it.

  • The Vine is a universal favorite, and rarely out of view; while it often seems to cover half the ground in sight.

  • The Vine appears at intervals, but is not general through this region: Indian Corn is also rare, and appears in small patches.

  • The vintage hath mourned, the vine hath languished away, all the merry have sighed.

  • Knowing the man and recognizing the mood, Coombes became silent, and this silence he did not break all the way to Vine Street.