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BEESWAX |
Honeycomb |
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WAX |
Expand honeycomb |
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BEEKEEPERS |
Honeycomb harvesters |
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APIARISTS |
Honeycomb harvester |
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WAXER |
Honeycomb harvester |
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HIVES |
Honeycomb containers |
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APIARIST |
Honeycomb harvester |
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BEE |
Honeycomb builder |
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ALVEOLUS |
A cell in a honeycomb. |
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ALVEOLATE |
Deeply pitted, like a honeycomb. |
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SMOCKING |
Ornamental needlework in a honeycomb pattern |
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FAVAGINOUS |
Formed like, or resembling, a honeycomb. |
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HONEYCOMBED |
Formed or perforated like a honeycomb. |
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FAVEOLATE |
Honeycomb; having cavities or cells, somewhat resembling
those of a honeycomb; alveolate; favose. |
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COMB |
The waxen framework forming the walls of the cells in which
bees store their honey, eggs, etc.; honeycomb. |
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HONEY |
A sweet viscid fluid, esp. that collected by bees from
flowers of plants, and deposited in the cells of the honeycomb. |
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RETICULUM |
The second stomach of ruminants, in which folds of the
mucous membrane form hexagonal cells; -- also called the honeycomb
stomach. |
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FAVUS |
A tile or flagstone cut into an hexagonal shape to produce a
honeycomb pattern, as in a pavement; -- called also favas and sectila. |
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HONEYCOMB |
Any substance, as a easting of iron, a piece of
worm-eaten wood, or of triple, etc., perforated with cells like a
honeycomb. |
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ELEMENT |
One out of several parts combined in a system of
aggregation, when each is of the nature of the whole; as, a single cell
is an element of the honeycomb. |
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BEEBREAD |
A brown, bitter substance found in some of the cells of
honeycomb. It is made chiefly from the pollen of flowers, which is
collected by bees as food for their young. |
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MANYPLIES |
The third division, or that between the reticulum, or
honeycomb stomach, and the abomasum, or rennet stomach, in the stomach
of ruminants; the ... |