英:['ɒksaɪ]
美:['ɒksˌaɪ]
英:['ɒksaɪ]
美:['ɒksˌaɪ]
ox·eye
aks aI
复数:oxeyes
The first known use of oxeye was in the 15th century
oxidizeverb
to combine with oxygen
to remove hydrogen from especially by the action of oxygen
to remove one or more electrons from (an atom, ion, or molecule)
to become oxidized
oxidizeverb
to combine with oxygen
to remove hydrogen from especially by the action of oxygen
to remove one or more electrons from (an atom, ion, or molecule)
to become oxidized
oxidizeverb
to combine with oxygen
to remove hydrogen from especially by the action of oxygen
to remove one or more electrons from (an atom, ion, or molecule)
to become oxidized
oxidizeverb
to combine with oxygen
to remove hydrogen from especially by the action of oxygen
to remove one or more electrons from (an atom, ion, or molecule)
to become oxidized
oxidenoun
a compound of oxygen with another element or a chemical group
oxidenoun
a compound of oxygen with another element or a chemical group
oxidationnoun
the process of oxidizing
the state or result of being oxidized
oxidationnoun
the process of oxidizing
the state or result of being oxidized
oxfordnoun
a low shoe laced over the middle of the foot
oxford cloth
oxeyenoun
any of several plants related to the daisies and having heads with both disk and ray flowers
1 The scarves are emblazoned with botanical prints based on plants like white oxeye daisy, purple spotted knapweed and yellow toadflax.
2 In the rough grass fields tough, wiry bents, thistles with purple flowers, and the remnants of oxeye daisies on brittle stalks rise almost to the height of your knees.
3 In the beech woods around Burguete six species of tits were common, viz., the oxeye, blue, cole, marsh, long-tailed and crested.
4 Beveridge said her property is dotted with oxeye daisies simply because deer leave those plants alone and chew through everything else.
5 White oxeye daisies pop up in every sunny spot where the soil is totally unimproved, showing how forgiving they are of poor land.
6 A costly Diamond, that had once sparkled in a lady's ring, lay in a field amid tall grasses and oxeye daisies.
7 Plants and flowers, 41, 42. azaleas, 52. camellias, 52. night-blooming cereus, 50. oxeye daisy, 44. peonies, 53. pitcher plant, 43. tulips, 53.
8 Grasshoppers Grasshoppers go in many a thumming spring And now to stalks of tasseled sow-grass cling, That shakes and swees awhile, but still keeps straight; While arching oxeye doubles with his weight.
9 And he who did this thing, the unspeakable oxeye with his black and yellow breast—"catanic black and amber"—even while I made my lamentation was tinkling his merry song overhead in the windy elms.
10 The squirrels and oxeyes squabbled in the hazels, and the badgers went harvesting when the moon rose.
11 At the very top of the house, in a former dovecote with oxeye windows, there’s now a yoga studio and a roof deck with a hair-raising view of the river valley.
12 The farmer in this locality must have an alert eye for Canada thistles and oxeye daisy.
13 Swimming to the end of the pool, you can reach out and touch the oxeye daisies growing in the new wildflower meadow.
14 White oxeye daisies in masses and groups, lilac-tinted thistles, and bright scarlet poppies grow in profusion among the tall wheat stalks.
15 Beside an assortment of spray carnation, baby’s breath, cornflower and oxeye daisy is the caption: “Classified ‘Spare Parts’ deal.
16 Ragged-robin, yellow crowsfoot, purple orchis, filled the grass, intermixed with the blue of borage and the white and gold of the oxeye.
17 Comic faces in hollywood's film are always moonface, oxeye, bingle, lovely to children.
好莱坞动画影片的女主角通常长着一张圆脸, 大眼睛, 短发, 可爱的适应孩子们喜爱的脸.
18 But is not the sorrel itself red, and the oxeyes white?
19 A tuft of oxeye daisies in the shelter of a ruinous worm fence attracted him, and he reined the cob from the highway to fetch them.
20 But that was changing: He pointed to butter-and-eggs, oxeye daisies, bellflowers, tufted vetch, hemp nettle, spotted jewelweed, creeping Charlie, common tansy, orange hawkweed.
1 牛眼菊