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to shoots
verb
To launch a projectile. To fire (a weapon that releases a projectile). To fire (a projectile). To fire a projectile at (a person or target). To cause a weapon to discharge a projectile. To ejaculate. To begin to speak. To discharge a missile; said of a weapon. To dismiss or do away with. To photograph.
Exact(60)
The plant is vitamin- and protein-packed and edible, when young, from roots to shoots.
The boy appears to shoots him in the forehead and shouts "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest).
Cartland's amiable but indigent father Bertie had to travel to shoots by bicycle.
So I started bringing my own food to shoots because you don't know what you're going to get.
Other personal work, the way I did it, travelling to shoots, would have had me away from Amelia.
She eventually concocted her own foundation to tote around to shoots, and then began selling it at J. C. Penney.
They spent $1,000 of their own money and borrowed Ms. Adams's parents' car to drive to shoots.
We sent columnists to Milan and Tokyo, photographers to shoots in lovely estates in Bedford and sleek lofts in Manhattan.
The upward transport to shoots was minimal for both plant species.
Andreotti et al. [124] have found that Phragmites australis can relocate Cu from roots to shoots.
For example, Lsi6 is closely linked to Lsi1 and is involved in Si translocation from roots to shoots.
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