Random Image for earbob

Image originally shown at http://www.reimerseeds.com/images/products/hotpepper/hotpepperE/Earbob_Hot_Peppers_Seeds.jpg
Image for earbob
Possible definitions for earbob
arbor
Garden shelter providing privacy and partial protection from the weather, most commonly a lightweight, latticed framework (trellis) of wood or metal with interlaced branches of vines or climbing shrubs trained over it. If there is a distinction between an arbor and a bower, it is that the bower is an entirely natural recess whereas an arbor is only partially natural.
Barbosa
Brazilian orator, statesman, and jurist. Born in Bahia, Barbosa, an eloquent liberal, wrote the constitution for Brazil's newly formed republic in 1890, and held various posts, incl. minister of finance, in the provisional government that launched the republic. He became a senator in 1895, and in 1907 led a delegation to the Second Hague Conference, where he gained international renown for his oratory and for his defense of the legal equality of rich and poor nations. He ran for president in 1910 on an antimilitary platform, and again in 1919, but lost both times.
carbon
Nonmetallic chemical element, chemical symbol C, atomic number 6. The usual stable isotope is carbon-12; carbon-13, another stable isotope, is 1% of natural carbon. Carbon-14 is the most stable and best known of five radioactive isotopes (see radioactivity); its half-life of approximately 5,730 years makes it useful in radiocarbon dating and radiolabeling of research compounds. Carbon occurs in three allotropes: diamond, graphite, and carbon black (amorphous carbon), incl. coal, coke, and charcoal. Carbon forms more compounds than all other elements combined; several million are known. Each carbon atom forms four bonds (four single bonds, two single and one double bond, two double bonds, or one single and one triple bond) with up to four other atoms. Multitudes of chain, branched, ring, and three-dimensional structures can occur. The study of these carbon compounds and their properties and reactions is organic chemistry. With hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and a few other elements whose small amounts belie their important roles, carbon forms the compounds that make up all living things: proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids. Biochemistry is the study of how those compounds are synthesized and broken down and how they associate with each other in living organisms. Organisms consume carbon and return it to the environment in the carbon cycle. Carbon dioxide, produced when carbon is burned, is about 0.03% of air, and carbon occurs in the earth's crust as carbonate rocks and the hydrocarbons in coal, petroleum, and natural gas. The oceans contain large amounts of dissolved carbon dioxide and carbonates.
carob
Leguminous evergreen tree (Ceratonia siliqua) native to the E Mediterranean region and cultivated elsewhere. It is sometimes known as locust, or St. John's bread, in the belief that the "locusts" on which John the Baptist fed were carob pods. The tree, about 50 ft (15 m) tall, bears compound, glossy leaves with thick ...
Top words beginning with E: enterostenosis, excogitative, epimeres, edirne, equanimity, erbb, elongating, exodist, eluviates, emmetrope, exudence, enlarged, epixylous, exfiltration, emancipatress, enfettered, ensnaringly, earlike, equalised, epidermal
Browse the alphabet: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z