英:['beəberɪ]
美:['berberɪ]
英:['beəberɪ]
美:['berberɪ]
复数:bearberries
The first known use of bearberry was in 1677
bearernoun
someone or something that bears, supports, or carries
a person holding a check or order for payment
bearernoun
someone or something that bears, supports, or carries
a person holding a check or order for payment
beard1 of 2noun
the hair that grows on a man's face often not including the mustache
a hairy or bristly growth or bunch (as on the chin of a goat)
beard2 of 2verb
to face or challenge boldly
bearded his enemy
beard1 of 2noun
the hair that grows on a man's face often not including the mustache
a hairy or bristly growth or bunch (as on the chin of a goat)
beard2 of 2verb
to face or challenge boldly
bearded his enemy
beard1 of 2noun
the hair that grows on a man's face often not including the mustache
a hairy or bristly growth or bunch (as on the chin of a goat)
beard2 of 2verb
to face or challenge boldly
bearded his enemy
bearberrynoun
a trailing evergreen plant with glossy red berries that is related to the heath
bearberrynoun
a trailing evergreen plant (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi) of the heath family (Ericaceae) with astringent foliage and red berries see uvaursi
1 Hyper Skin’s latest face mask will leave you radiant while also working to fade dark spots with niacinamide and bearberry.
2 The alpine bearberry, listed as threatened by the state, is said to be at risk from climate change and trampling by hikers among other things.
3 Tribal history shows everything from tree bark to bearberry leaves were used.
4 The Greek generic name, translated into English, becomes "bearberry."
5 It veered off to the west for a short ways and then angled upward over huge boulders spotted with ground juniper and bearberry.
6 When the urine is thick and deficient in quantity, or voided with difficulty, it may be given in the following form:— Powdered bearberry, 1 ounce.
7 A ways down the road we found equally varied botany: dwarf willows, crowberry plants and alpine bearberry shrubs that would turn crimson in two months.
8 Derived from the bearberry plant or pear tree leaves, arbutin is a natural derivative of hydroquinone that prevents melanin formation.
9 Through the use of licorice root, bearberry, and willow bark, this gel face wash also protects against acne breakouts, calms inflammation, and prevents irritation.
10 As illustrations of such, we have the wintergreen, partridge berry, bush cranberry, bearberry, service berry, currant, holly, strawberry, red-berried elder, winter berry, honeysuckle, and many more.
11 The mask contains a powerful AHA pair of glycolic acid and mandelic acid to clear congested pores and brighten dull skin, while niacinamide and bearberry help erase persistent dark spots.
12 Among the species partial to snow are the bearberry shrub, yellow jackets and voles.
13 She pulled herself to the top with a branch of bearberry shrub, and offered him her hand.
14 Crimson bearberries and poisonous purple monkshood flowers swayed in the wind near the hill's summit.
15 The juice of bearberries gives them a bright red.
16 Yes, ma'am," said Asahel staring a little; — "there's red raspberries, and black raspberries, and low-bush blackberries and high blackberries, and huckleberries, and bearberries, and cranberries; besides nuts, and apples.
17 This brightening serum contains 15 percent vitamin C, plus a blend of ingredients like kojic acid, bearberry, licorice, and salicylic acid to brighten dark spots while preventing future breakouts.
18 The term “traditional tobacco” can refer to other indigenous plants that may not contain nicotine at all, including the dried leaves of bearberries and the bark from red and spotted willows.
19 And you can find the cactus growing in dunes next to a plant called bearberry, which is typically found in the Arctic, he says.
20 The line’s debut product, Hyper Clear, helps to heal hyperpigmentation while simultaneously enhancing glow with its blend of vitamin C, vitamin E, kojic acid, hyaluronic acid, turmeric, and bearberry.