<span class="searchmatch">nut</span> <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> (uncountable) A plant used in salads, lamb's <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> or mâche, Valerianella locusta...
lettucelike <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> opium <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> sea slug <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> trim lettucey miner's <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> <span class="searchmatch">nut</span> <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> prickly <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> purple <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> romaine <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> Romaine <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> sand...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Nut</span>, <span class="searchmatch">NUT</span>, <span class="searchmatch">nuť</span>, <span class="searchmatch">nút</span>, <span class="searchmatch">nût</span>, <span class="searchmatch">nứt</span>, <span class="searchmatch">Nüt</span>, -<span class="searchmatch">nut</span>, and -<span class="searchmatch">núť</span> <span class="searchmatch">nut</span> (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Nùng. Wiktionary’s coverage of Nùng...
one end. It can be inserted into an unthreaded hole up to the head, with a <span class="searchmatch">nut</span> then threaded on the other end; a heavy machine screw. A sliding pin or bar...
head. A clump of seeds, leaves or flowers; a capitulum. Give me a head of <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span>. 2013 May-June, David Van Tassel, Lee DeHaan, “Wild Plants to the Rescue”...
English appel (“Malus domestica fruit or tree, apple; any type of fruit, <span class="searchmatch">nut</span>, or tuber; tree bearing fruit; (figurative) ball, sphere; (Christianity)...
the fruit part of several vegetables, such as the heart of a cabbage or <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> pomme épineuse ― jimsonweed (colloquial) the head or face (colloquial)...
Alternatively, instead of cooking in a matka, wrap the vegetable mixture (without <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> leaves) in aluminium foil and bake in a hot oven at 200 degrees Celsius...
the red-cored pippy fruit may throw a pleasant acid halo about the shred <span class="searchmatch">lettuce</span> luminous with golden oil, the fruit itself is a most ugly and disappointing...