释义 |
pine
pine 1 P0310700 (pīn)n.1. Any of various evergreen trees of the genus Pinus, having fascicles of needle-shaped leaves and producing woody seed-bearing cones. These trees are widely cultivated for ornament and shade and for their timber and resinous sap, which yields turpentine and pine tar.2. Any of various other coniferous trees, such as the Norfolk Island pine.3. The wood of any of these trees. [Middle English, from Old English pīn, from Latin pīnus; see peiə- in Indo-European roots.]
pine 2 P0310700 (pīn)v. pined, pin·ing, pines v.intr.1. To feel a lingering, often nostalgic desire.2. To wither or waste away from longing or grief: pined away and died.v.tr. Archaic To grieve or mourn for.n. Archaic Intense longing or grief. [Middle English pinen, from pine, suffering, from Old English pīne, punishment, torment, from Vulgar Latin *pēna, variant of Latin poena, penalty, from Greek poinē; see kwei- in Indo-European roots.]pine (paɪn) n1. (Plants) any evergreen resinous coniferous tree of the genus Pinus, of the N hemisphere, with long needle-shaped leaves and brown cones: family Pinaceae. See also longleaf pine, nut pine, pitch pine, Scots pine2. (Plants) any other tree or shrub of the family Pinaceae3. (Forestry) the wood of any of these trees4. (Plants) any of various similar but unrelated plants, such as ground pine and screw pine[Old English pīn, from Latin pīnus pine]
pine (paɪn) vb1. (intr; often foll by for or an infinitive) to feel great longing or desire; yearn2. (often foll by: away) to become ill, feeble, or thin through worry, longing, etc3. (tr) archaic to mourn or grieve for[Old English pīnian to torture, from pīn pain, from Medieval Latin pēna, from Latin poena pain]
Pine (paɪn) n (Biography) Courtney. born 1964, British jazz saxophonist and clarinettistpine1 (paɪn) n. 1. any evergreen tree of the genus Pinus, having needlelike leaves borne in bundles and woody cones enclosing winged seeds: valued for their wood and their resinous products, as turpentine. 2. the wood of a pine tree. [before 1000; Middle English; Old English pīn < Latin pīnus] pine2 (paɪn) v. pined, pin•ing, n. v.i. 1. to yearn deeply; long painfully: to pine for one's family. 2. to fail gradually in health or vitality from grief, regret, or longing (often fol. by away). v.t. 3. Archaic. to suffer grief or regret over. n. 4. Archaic. painful longing. [before 900; Middle English: to torment, be in pain; Old English pīnian to torture, derivative of pīn torture (Middle English pine) « Latin poena punishment. See pain] syn: See yearn. pine (pīn) Any of various evergreen trees that bear cones and have clusters of needle-shaped leaves. Pines are found chiefly in cooler temperate regions in the Northern Hemisphere.pine- Japanese garden - Often uses bamboo, mondo grasses, pine, and small pools of water containing koi.
- pine, pinecone - Pine, the tree, is from Latin pinus, from Indo-European pei-, "resin"; pinecones were originally called pineapples.
- pine, fir, spruce - Pine, fir, and spruce are quite different from each other, though they are all conifers; pine has clusters of long, needle-shaped leaves, spruce is a type of fir, and the only scientific difference between the two is that spruces have rectangular needles while firs have flat, needle-shaped leaves.
- pinot - A variant of French pineau, a diminutive of pine, from the shape of the clusters of grapes.
pine Past participle: pined Gerund: pining
Present |
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I pine | you pine | he/she/it pines | we pine | you pine | they pine |
Preterite |
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I pined | you pined | he/she/it pined | we pined | you pined | they pined |
Present Continuous |
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I am pining | you are pining | he/she/it is pining | we are pining | you are pining | they are pining |
Present Perfect |
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I have pined | you have pined | he/she/it has pined | we have pined | you have pined | they have pined |
Past Continuous |
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I was pining | you were pining | he/she/it was pining | we were pining | you were pining | they were pining |
Past Perfect |
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I had pined | you had pined | he/she/it had pined | we had pined | you had pined | they had pined |
Future |
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I will pine | you will pine | he/she/it will pine | we will pine | you will pine | they will pine |
Future Perfect |
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I will have pined | you will have pined | he/she/it will have pined | we will have pined | you will have pined | they will have pined |
Future Continuous |
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I will be pining | you will be pining | he/she/it will be pining | we will be pining | you will be pining | they will be pining |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been pining | you have been pining | he/she/it has been pining | we have been pining | you have been pining | they have been pining |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been pining | you will have been pining | he/she/it will have been pining | we will have been pining | you will have been pining | they will have been pining |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been pining | you had been pining | he/she/it had been pining | we had been pining | you had been pining | they had been pining |
Conditional |
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I would pine | you would pine | he/she/it would pine | we would pine | you would pine | they would pine |
Past Conditional |
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I would have pined | you would have pined | he/she/it would have pined | we would have pined | you would have pined | they would have pined | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | pine - a coniferous tree pine tree, true pinegenus Pinus, Pinus - type genus of the Pinaceae: large genus of true pinespine - straight-grained durable and often resinous white to yellowish timber of any of numerous trees of the genus Pinuspinon, pinyon - any of several low-growing pines of western North AmericaPinus glabra, spruce pine - large two-needled pine of southeastern United States with light soft woodPinus nigra, black pine - large two-needled timber pine of southeastern Europenorthern pitch pine, Pinus rigida, pitch pine - large three-needled pine of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada; closely related to the pond pinePinus serotina, pond pine - large three-needled pine of sandy swamps of southeastern United States; needles longer than those of the northern pitch pineEuropean nut pine, Pinus pinea, stone pine, umbrella pine - medium-sized two-needled pine of southern Europe having a spreading crown; widely cultivated for its sweet seeds that resemble almondsarolla pine, cembra nut tree, Pinus cembra, Swiss pine, Swiss stone pine - large five-needled European pine; yields cembra nuts and a resinous exudatemugho pine, mugo pine, Pinus mugo, Swiss mountain pine, dwarf mountain pine, mountain pine - low shrubby pine of central Europe with short bright green needles in bunches of twoancient pine, Pinus longaeva - small slow-growing pine of western United States similar to the bristlecone pine; chocolate brown bark in plates and short needles in bunches of 5; crown conic but becoming rough and twisted; oldest plant in the world growing to 5000 years in cold semidesert mountain topswhite pine - any of several five-needled pines with white wood and smooth usually light grey bark when young; especially the eastern white pineyellow pine - any of various pines having yellow woodJeffrey pine, Jeffrey's pine, Pinus jeffreyi, black pine - tall symmetrical pine of western North America having long blue-green needles in bunches of 3 and elongated cones on spreading somewhat pendulous branches; sometimes classified as a variety of ponderosa pinelodgepole, lodgepole pine, Pinus contorta, shore pine, spruce pine - shrubby two-needled pine of coastal northwestern United States; red to yellow-brown bark fissured into small squaresPinus contorta murrayana, Sierra lodgepole pine - tall subspecies of lodgepole pinefrankincense pine, loblolly pine, Pinus taeda - tall spreading three-needled pine of southeastern United States having reddish-brown fissured bark and a full bushy upper headjack pine, Pinus banksiana - slender medium-sized two-needled pine of eastern North America; with yellow-green needles and scaly grey to red-brown fissured barkswamp pine - any of several pines that prefer or endure moist situations such as loblolly pine or longleaf pineCanadian red pine, Pinus resinosa, red pine - pine of eastern North America having long needles in bunches of two and reddish barkPinus sylvestris, Scotch fir, Scotch pine, Scots pine - medium large two-needled pine of northern Europe and Asia having flaking red-brown barkJersey pine, Pinus virginiana, scrub pine, Virginia pine - common small shrubby pine of the eastern United States having straggling often twisted or branches and short needles in bunches of 2Monterey pine, Pinus radiata - tall California pine with long needles in bunches of 3, a dense crown, and dark brown deeply fissured barkbristlecone pine, Pinus aristata, Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine - small slow-growing upland pine of western United States (Rocky Mountains) having dense branches with fissured rust-brown bark and short needles in bunches of 5 and thorn-tipped cone scales; among the oldest living things some over 4500 years oldhickory pine, Pinus pungens, prickly pine, table-mountain pine - a small two-needled upland pine of the eastern United States (Appalachians) having dark brown flaking bark and thorn-tipped cone scalesknobcone pine, Pinus attenuata - medium-sized three-needled pine of the Pacific coast of the United States having a prominent knob on each scale of the coneJapanese red pine, Japanese table pine, Pinus densiflora - pine native to Japan and Korea having a wide-spreading irregular crown when mature; grown as an ornamentalJapanese black pine, Pinus thunbergii, black pine - large Japanese ornamental having long needles in bunches of 2; widely planted in United States because of its resistance to salt and smog | | 2. | pine - straight-grained durable and often resinous white to yellowish timber of any of numerous trees of the genus Pinuspine, pine tree, true pine - a coniferous treeknotty pine - pine lumber with many knots; used especially for paneling and furniturewhite pine - soft white wood of white pine treesyellow pine - hard yellowish wood of a yellow pinewood - the hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees | Verb | 1. | pine - have a desire for something or someone who is not present; "She ached for a cigarette"; "I am pining for my lover"yen, ache, languish, yearndie - languish as with love or desire; "She dying for a cigarette"; "I was dying to leave"hanker, long, yearn - desire strongly or persistently |
pineverb waste, decline, weaken, sicken, sink, flag, fade, decay, dwindle, wither, wilt, languish, droop While away from her children, she pined dreadfully.pine for something or someone1. long, ache, crave, yearn, sigh, carry a torch, eat your heart out over, suspire (archaic or poetic) She was pining for her lost husband.2. hanker after, crave, covet, wish for, yearn for, thirst for, hunger for, lust after pining for a mythical pastpineverb1. To have a strong longing for:ache, covet, desire, hanker, long, pant, want, wish, yearn.Informal: hone.2. To waste away from longing or grief.Also used with away:languish, wither.Translationspine1 (pain) noun1. any of several kinds of evergreen trees with cones (ˈpine-cones) and needlelike leaves ( ˈpine-needles). 松樹 松树2. its wood. The table is made of pine; (also adjective) a pine table. 松木 松木
pine2 (pain) verb1. (often with away) to lose strength, become weak (with pain, grief etc). Since his death she has been pining (away). 憔悴,衰弱 憔悴,衰弱 2. (usually with for) to want (something) very much; to long (for someone or something, or to do something). He knew that his wife was pining for home. 渴望 渴望
pine
ride the pineIn sports (especially baseball), to remain sitting on the bench, rather than be an active participant in the game. Primarily heard in US. I'm not going to play next year if coach makes me ride the pine again this season. I rode the pine for the rest of the game after I pulled my hamstring sliding to first base.See also: pine, ridepine awayTo lapse into a period of intense depression or melancholy due to one's longing for or grief over someone or something. I stayed back in Seattle pining away, while she was over in Europe having the time of her life. My grandfather pined away for nearly a year after my grandmother died, until eventually his heart gave out and he passed away as well.See also: away, pinepine after (someone or something)To desire or grieve over someone or something so intensely that one becomes depressed or melancholy. You can't just sitting here pining after your ex-boyfriend. It's over—you need to get out there and live your life! I can't stand these kids who pine after the latest, most expensive tech gadgets, even when they literally have no need for them!See also: after, pinepine over (someone or something)To desire or grieve over someone or something so intensely that one becomes depressed or melancholy. You can't just sitting here pining over your ex-boyfriend. It's over—you need to get out there and live your life! I can't stand these kids who pine over the latest, most expensive tech gadgets, even when they literally have no need for them!See also: over, pinepine for (someone or something)To desire or grieve over someone or something so intensely that one becomes depressed or melancholy. You can't just sitting here pining for your ex-boyfriend. It's over—you need to get out there and live your life! I can't stand these kids who pine for the latest, most expensive tech gadgets, even when they literally have no need for them!See also: pinepine after someone or something and pine for someone or something; pine over someone or somethingto long for or grieve for someone or something. Bob pined after Doris for weeks after she left. Dan is still pining for his lost dog. There is no point in pining over Claire.See also: after, pinepine away (after someone or something)to waste away in melancholy and longing for someone or something. A year later, he was still pining away after Claire. Still, he is pining away.See also: away, pineride the pine (or bench) (of an athlete) not participate in a game or event, typically because of poor form. North American informalSee also: pine, ridepine away v. To wither or waste away from longing or grief: After its owner was killed, the old dog pined away and died.See also: away, pinepine forv. To long or grieve intensely for someone or something: All summer he sat in the garden pining for his girlfriend back home. Many teachers pine for the days when students were better behaved.See also: pinepine
pine, common name for members of the Pinaceae, a family of resinous woody trees with needlelike, usually evergreen leaves. The Pinaceae reproduce by means of cones (see conecone or strobilus , in botany, reproductive organ of the gymnosperms (the conifers, cycads, and ginkgoes). Like the flower in the angiosperms (flowering plants), the cone is actually a highly modified branch; unlike the flower, it does not have sepals or petals. ..... Click the link for more information. ) rather than flowers and many have winged seeds, suitable for wind distribution. They are found chiefly in north temperate regions, where they form vast forests. The family was apparently more abundant in the mid-Cenozoic era, but it has maintained its population better than other gymnosperms because the trees are more adaptable to cold, dry climates; the reduced leaf surface and deep-set stomata minimize loss of water by transpiration. The family is the largest and most important of the conifers, providing naval stores, paper pulp, and more lumber by far than any other family. In some localities almost pure stands occur, permitting economical lumbering of large numbers of a given type of tree. Of the family's nine genera four are widely dispersed throughout North America and the Old World. Members of all nine genera are represented in horticulture as introduced timber trees or ornamentals. The so-called kauri pine, although pinelike in appearance, belongs to another family (see monkey-puzzle treemonkey-puzzle tree, evergreen tree (Araucaria araucana) native to Chile and widely cultivated elsewhere as an ornamental. The symmetrical branches have an unusual angularity and are completely covered by the stiff, overlapping leaves. ..... Click the link for more information. ). The True Pines Pinus (the true pines) is the largest and most widespread genus, characteristic of many north temperate regions (except the plains), especially at lower altitudes, and in a few tropical regions, notably on mountain slopes. Species of Pinus can often be identified by the leaf arrangement, one needle or clusters of from two to five (in all cases enclosed in a sheath at the base) being consistently produced by each type. Many of the pines are economically valuable; from them come the naval stores: pitch (see tar and pitchtar and pitch, viscous, dark-brown to black substances obtained by the destructive distillation of coal, wood, petroleum, peat, and certain other organic materials. The heating or partial burning of wood to make charcoal yields tar as a byproduct and is an ancient method for the ..... Click the link for more information. ), turpentineturpentine, yellow to brown semifluid oleoresin exuded from the sapwood of pines, firs, and other conifers. It is made up of two principal components, an essential oil and a type of resin that is called rosin. ..... Click the link for more information. , and rosinrosin or colophony, hard, brittle, translucent resin, obtained as a solid residue from crude turpentine. Usually pale yellow or amber, its color may vary from brownish-black to transparent depending on the nature of the source of the crude turpentine. ..... Click the link for more information. . Drying and nondrying oils are also made from the seeds of some pines. Several Mediterranean and American species yield edible seeds (see pine nutpine nut or piñon , edible seed of various species of pine trees. Among the North American species that bear such edible seeds are the nut pines or piñons, Pinus edulis and P. monophylla, and the Digger pine, P. ..... Click the link for more information. ). The ponderosa pine or western yellow pine (P. ponderosa), is a hard pine second only to the Douglas fir as a commercial timber tree in North America. The white pine (P. strobus) has straight-grained soft wood with little resin, used especially for interior trim and cabinetwork. It once grew densely from Newfoundland to Manitoba and over much of the E United States westward to Minnesota, but constant felling and attacks of white-pine blister rustrust, in botany, name for various parasitic fungi of the order Uredinales and for the diseases of plants that they cause. Rusts form reddish patches of spores on the host plant. About 7,000 species are known. ..... Click the link for more information. have greatly depleted the stands, especially in the NE United States. The Norway pine, or red pine, (P. resinosa) has a similar range and has also suffered from overcutting. Its wood is somewhat heavier and is suitable for general construction. The Norway pine is frequently used in reforestation programs. The jack pine (P. banksiana), the most northern of the American species, thrives on poor and sandy soils and is much used to colonize areas where more valuable species may later be introduced. Although the trunk is often gnarled, making it unsuitable for good lumber, it supplies much pulpwood and is used locally for rough lumber, fuel, and crating. The Virginia pine (P. virginiana) of the Appalachians and the Piedmont is popular regionally as a Christmas tree. The longleaf pine, or Southern yellow pine (P. palustris) has highly resinous wood used for heavy construction and as a major source of naval stores and pulpwood. It and the faster growing slash pine (P. caribaea) of the same region have gained importance as northern pine stands have been depleted. The latter is widely cultivated in tropical areas with sandy soils. The Scotch pine (P. sylvestris), ranging from Scotland to Siberia and popular as a Christmas tree in the United States, is one of the most valuable timber trees of Europe. The cluster pine (P. pinaster), widespread in S France and in Spain, is the chief European source of turpentine. The Monterey pine (P. radiata) of California has been widely planted in New Zealand and Chile for reforestation. Other Species in the Pine Family Abies (firfir, any tree of the genus Abies of the family Pinaceae (pine family), tall pyramidal evergreen conifers characterized by short, flat, stemless needles and erect cylindrical cones that shed their scales rather than dropping off the tree whole. ..... Click the link for more information. ) species are usually of more northern distribution and found at higher altitudes. Sap-filled "blisters" on the trunks of some species provide balsambalsam , fragrant resin obtained from various trees. The true balsams are semisolid and insoluble in water, but they are soluble in alcohol and partly so in hydrocarbons. ..... Click the link for more information. . Larix (larchlarch, any tree of the genus Larix, conifers of the family Pinaceae (pine family), which are unusual in that they are not evergreen. The various species are widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere. ..... Click the link for more information. ) and Pseudolarix (golden larch, of China) are the only two deciduous genera. Picea (sprucespruce, any plant of the genus Picea, evergreen trees or shrubs of the family Pinaceae (pine family) widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere. The needles are angular in cross section, rather than flattened as in the related hemlocks and firs. The Norway spruce (P. ..... Click the link for more information. ) is the world's most important source of paper. Cedrus (cedarcedar, common name for a number of trees, mostly coniferous evergreens. The true cedars belong to the small genus Cedrus of the family Pinaceae (pine family). All are native to the Old World from the Mediterranean to the Himalayas, although several are cultivated ..... Click the link for more information. ) ranges from the Mediterranean area to the Himalayas; Keteleeria is restricted to E and SE Asia. Tsuga (hemlockhemlock, any tree of the genus Tsuga, coniferous evergreens of the family Pinaceae (pine family) native to North America and Asia. The common hemlock of E North America is the eastern hemlock, T. ..... Click the link for more information. ) and Pseudotsuga are native only to North America and E Asia. Pseudotsuga menziesii (the Douglas fir) of W North America, one of the tallest trees known (up to 385 ft/117 m) and the leading timber-producing tree of the continent, is carefully controlled by forestryforestry, the management of forest lands for wood, water, wildlife, forage, and recreation. Because the major economic importance of the forest lies in wood and wood products, forestry has been chiefly concerned with timber management, especially reforestation, maintenance of ..... Click the link for more information. measures. Its wood, usually hard and strong, is of great commercial importance for construction; it is also commonly used as a Christmas tree in the United States. Named for David Douglas, the tree has many local names, e.g., Douglas spruce, Oregon pine, red fir, and yellow fir. Classification Pines are classified in the division PinophytaPinophyta , division of the plant kingdom consisting of those organisms commonly called gymnosperms. The gymnosperms, a group that includes the pine, have stems, roots and leaves, and vascular, or conducting, tissue (xylem and phloem). ..... Click the link for more information. , class Pinopsida, order Coniferales. pineA wood of a number of species of coniferous evergreens. The two classes, soft pine and hard pitch pine are an important source of construction lumber and plywood. See also: Masonite pine pine pine pineAll pine trees are edible. The whole thing- the needles, the young tiny soft (male) cones containing the pollen, the white inner bark (cambium) can be eaten raw, dried, powdered, added to soups, sauteed, steamed or boiled. One pound of inner pine bark is more nutritious than nine cups of raw whole milk. Pine nuts are super nutritious. The roots can be eaten and the root bark can be soaked in water and the water then drank as sugar water. The resin pitch gum can be chewed like gum for B vitamins and helping lung conditions. The only thing close to a pine tree being toxic is a yew tree, (not a pine tree). It's "needles" are actually soft flat thin leaves and it has tell-tale red berries with a hole in the bottom. Anyway, pine trees are one of the best sources of vitamin C in the world. Pine needles have 300x more vitamin c than oranges- also contain natural turpentines which are really good for respiratory infections- pneumonia, bronchitis. Pine bud tea is used to expel worms, help kidneys, lungs, laxative. You can munch on fresh young needles, or make a tea from them. Despite what some people say, pine tea is no threat to pregnant women. The sticky gum-resin is a great source of B-vitamins, pine nuts are an awesome source of protein, and the pollen… well... PINE POLLEN Want serious Libido, Energy and Youth ? Look no further than pine pollen. It's a true powerhouse wonder substance… a complete food and medicine. Pine Pollen is one of the ultimate superfoods in the world. It has over 200 bioacitve natural nutrients, minerals and vitamins source in one single serving, that is completely absorbed by the human body. No other nutritional supplement can do this. Pine Pollen will restore healthy levels of testosterone (without DHT). Pine pollen powder's claim to fame is the potent androgenic effect it has on the body. It contains bio-available androstenedione, testosterone, DHEA, androsterone and a wide variety of other steroidal type substances (which unlike synthetic steroids, these are perfectly safe)! These anabolic compounds not only help build muscle mass, they keep the skin smooth and tight, maintain a healthy libido, optimize tissue regeneration, optimize breast health in women and testicular and prostate health in men, aid in the excretion of excess estrogens and speed up the metabolism to help burn off excess fat. Since it's a complete superfood, it affects pretty much the entire body... lungs, immune system, skin, kidneys, brain, hair, bones, endocrine, liver regeneration, bile secretion, heart, increases cardiovascular endurance, raises blood levels of Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) perhaps the most powerful and crucial antioxidant the body makes, lowers cholesterol, spleen... all in the direction of anti-aging. Pine pollen stabilizes collagen and elastin, which make up the underlying matrix of the skin, thus preventing wrinkles. Pine pollen balances hormones. The phyto-androgens in pine pollen help to counter the effects of estrogen mimicking substances that we are exposed to more and more of like plastic bottles, food containers, body care products, cleaners, medications, plastics, dairy products and more can mimic estrogens in our bodies and lead to hair loss and Pine pollen is more stimulating and energizing than coffee without the caffeine or stimulants. It’s 30% protein. Increases sexual power in both men and women. Less recovery time from gym and less sleep. Helps nourish skin and hair, clears brain fog, removes age spots. Rutin, one of the components of pine pollen, increases the strength of the capillary vessels and helps protect the cardiovascular system, heart, blood and blood vessels. Pine pollen is 99% digestible, much more than bee pollen. Over 20 Amino Acids and 8 Essential Amino Acids Making Pine Pollen A Complete Protein: Alanine, Arginine, Aspartic, Cysteine, Glutamic, Acid, Glycine, Histidine,Isoleucine, Leucine, Lysine, Methionine, Phenylalanie, Proline, Serine, Threonine, Tryptophan, Tyrosine, Valine. Some people are allergic to pollen (a sign the liver needs cleaning and adrenals need rebuilding), so take a tiny bit first (1/8 tsp) and see how you react. Gradually build up as your body adapts to its potency. Recommended Usage: one spoonful twice daily. You can harvest your own pine pollen. Find out what time of year in your area the pine trees pollinate (when yellow powder coats everything). Usually mid April for northern countries. You can place the bag over the ends of the pine tree branches and gently knock the cones to get the pine pollen yellow powder to fall off into the bag. PINE, SPRUCE or FIR TREE PITCH - GUM- RESIN When a pine tree is injured, it secretes resin, which is a protective antiseptic, full of B vitamins. It’s very sticky and hard to get off skin, so it's good for sealing wounds together, and keep it sterile because it's an antiseptic. It will stick to your teeth until it dissolves, leaving your teeth white again. It can be used as glue, and can be taken off with oils or butter. It’s actually been used to seal root canals! Chew and swallow small pieces- helps bring phlegm up out of lungs (expectorant). PINE BARK has Pycnogenol- a highly active bioflavonoid. It doubles blood vessel strength, improves circulation, joint flexibility, defend collagen destruction, varicose veins, hemorrhoids, protect brain cells and slow the aging process. It strengthens the entire arterial system. Used in Europe as an "oral cosmetic" because it stimulates collagen-rich connective tissue against atherosclerosis and helps joint flexibility. It is one of the few dietary antioxidants that crosses the blood-brain barrier to directly protect brain cells. (Pycnogenol is also found in grape seed extract) PINE NUTS are an amazing food source, used by indians, birds and squirrels. Indians used pine nut soup as a replacement for mothers milk! Lost in the woods? The Eastern white pine (the one with the long needles) can help you find your way. It always has a big huge diagonal branch pointing EAST. Is the Australian Pine edible? Yes.pine[′pīn] (botany) Any of the cone-bearing trees composing the genus Pinus; characterized by evergreen leaves (needles), usually in tight clusters of two to five. pineThe wood of a number of species of coniferous evergreen distributed throughout the world; may be divided into two classes: soft (white) pine and hard (pitch) pine. An important source of construction lumber and plywood.pine the wood of any of these trees
pine1. any evergreen resinous coniferous tree of the genus Pinus, of the N hemisphere, with long needle-shaped leaves and brown cones: family Pinaceae 2. any other tree or shrub of the family Pinaceae 3. any of various similar but unrelated plants, such as ground pine and screw pine
Pine Courtney. born 1964, British jazz saxophonist PineProgram for Internet News & Email. A tool for reading,sending, and managing electronic messages. It was designedspecifically with novice computer users in mind, but can betailored to accommodate the needs of "power users" as well.Pine uses Internet message protocols (e.g. RFC 822,SMTP, MIME, IMAP, NNTP) and runs under Unix andMS-DOS.
The guiding principles for Pine's user-interface were: carefullimitation of features, one-character mnemonic commands,always-present command menus, immediate user feedback, andhigh tolerance for user mistakes. It is intended that Pinecan be learned by exploration rather than reading manuals.Feedback from the University of Washington community and agrowing number of Internet sites has been encouraging.
Pine's message composition editor, Pico, is also availableas a separate stand-alone program. Pico is a very simple andeasy-to-use text editor offering paragraph justification,cut/paste, and a spelling checker.
Pine features on-line help; a message index showing a messagesummary which includes the status, sender, size, date andsubject of messages; commands to view and process messages; amessage composer with easy-to-use editor and spelling checker;an address book for saving long complex addresses and personaldistribution lists under a nickname; message attachments viaMultipurpose Internet Mail Extensions; folder managementcommands for creating, deleting, listing, or renaming messagefolders; access to remote message folders and archives via theInteractive Mail Access Protocol as defined in RFC 1176;access to Usenet news via NNTP or IMAP.
Pine, Pico and UW's IMAP server are copyrighted butfreely available.
Unix Pine runs on Ultrix, AIX, SunOS, SVR4 andPTX. PC-Pine is available for Packet Driver, Novell LWP, FTP PC/TCP and Sun PC/NFS. A Microsoft Windows/WinSock version is planned, as are extensions foroff-line use.
Pine was originally based on Elm but has evolved much since("Pine Is No-longer Elm"). Pine is the work of Mike Seibel,Mark Crispin, Steve Hubert, Sheryl Erez, David Miller andLaurence Lundblade (now at Virginia Tech) at the University ofWashington Office of Computing and Communications.
ftp://ftp.cac.washington.edu/mail/pine.tar.Z.telnet://demo.cac.washington.edu/ (login as "pinedemo").
E-mail: ,,.pine
pine (pīn), An evergreen coniferous tree of the genus Pinus (family Pinaceae), various species of which yield tar, turpentine, resin, and volatile oils. [L. pinus, a pine tree] PINE
Acronym | Definition |
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PINE➣Program for Internet News and E-Mail | PINE➣Pine Is Not Elm | PINE➣New Jersey Pinelands National Reserve (US National Park Service) | PINE➣Program for Internet News & Email | PINE➣Predicting Impacts on Natural Ecotones (research project; EU) | PINE➣Participation in Nurse Education (UK) |
pine Related to pine: Pine oil, pine treeSynonyms for pineverb wasteSynonyms- waste
- decline
- weaken
- sicken
- sink
- flag
- fade
- decay
- dwindle
- wither
- wilt
- languish
- droop
phrase pine for something or someone: longSynonyms- long
- ache
- crave
- yearn
- sigh
- carry a torch
- eat your heart out over
- suspire
phrase pine for something or someone: hanker afterSynonyms- hanker after
- crave
- covet
- wish for
- yearn for
- thirst for
- hunger for
- lust after
Synonyms for pineverb to have a strong longing forSynonyms- ache
- covet
- desire
- hanker
- long
- pant
- want
- wish
- yearn
- hone
verb to waste away from longing or griefSynonymsSynonyms for pinenoun a coniferous treeSynonymsRelated Words- genus Pinus
- Pinus
- pine
- pinon
- pinyon
- Pinus glabra
- spruce pine
- Pinus nigra
- black pine
- northern pitch pine
- Pinus rigida
- pitch pine
- Pinus serotina
- pond pine
- European nut pine
- Pinus pinea
- stone pine
- umbrella pine
- arolla pine
- cembra nut tree
- Pinus cembra
- Swiss pine
- Swiss stone pine
- mugho pine
- mugo pine
- Pinus mugo
- Swiss mountain pine
- dwarf mountain pine
- mountain pine
- ancient pine
- Pinus longaeva
- white pine
- yellow pine
- Jeffrey pine
- Jeffrey's pine
- Pinus jeffreyi
- lodgepole
- lodgepole pine
- Pinus contorta
- shore pine
- Pinus contorta murrayana
- Sierra lodgepole pine
- frankincense pine
- loblolly pine
- Pinus taeda
- jack pine
- Pinus banksiana
- swamp pine
- Canadian red pine
- Pinus resinosa
- red pine
- Pinus sylvestris
- Scotch fir
- Scotch pine
- Scots pine
- Jersey pine
- Pinus virginiana
- scrub pine
- Virginia pine
- Monterey pine
- Pinus radiata
- bristlecone pine
- Pinus aristata
- Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine
- hickory pine
- Pinus pungens
- prickly pine
- table-mountain pine
- knobcone pine
- Pinus attenuata
- Japanese red pine
- Japanese table pine
- Pinus densiflora
- Japanese black pine
- Pinus thunbergii
- grey-leaf pine
- Pinus torreyana
- sabine pine
- soledad pine
- Torrey pine
- Torrey's pine
- pinecone
- conifer
- coniferous tree
noun straight-grained durable and often resinous white to yellowish timber of any of numerous trees of the genus PinusRelated Words- pine
- pine tree
- true pine
- knotty pine
- white pine
- yellow pine
- wood
verb have a desire for something or someone who is not presentSynonymsRelated Words |