0 a soft, green or grey growth that develops on old food or on objects that have been left for too long in warm, wet air:
There was mould on the cheese.
1 a hollow container with a particular shape into which soft or liquid substances are poured, so that when the substance becomes hard it takes the shape of the container:
2 If someone is from or in a particular mould, they have the characteristics typical of a certain type of person:
3 to make a soft substance have a particular shape:
Conodonts and brachiopods are usually preserved as moulds or replaced by silica.
It can cause the metal to tear away from the mould walls resulting in a deformed casting.
The other dimension of invisible language policies involves the role of creative writers in moulding language policy.
Let me therefore point to a piece of evidence that cannot be cast in this mould: the evidence for a majority status effect.
Seasonal variation in atmospheric concentration of fungal spores has been documented for some moulds in several geographical locations.
In addition, perceptions have also been moulded by the performance of former public enterprises after their transfer to private hands.
Her image left critics free to praise her: to note virility without suggesting that she fitted the usual authorial mould.
This pairing results from the practice of early modern papermakers, who used two paper moulds (crafted as a pair) in alternation.
中文繁体
灰綠色成長物, 黴, 黴菌…
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灰绿色成长物, 霉, 霉菌…
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moho, molde, moldear…
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mofo, molde, moldar…
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カビ, (鋳物の)鋳型, (菓子、料理の)型…
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küf, kalıp, şekil vermek…
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moisissure [feminine], terreau, humus…
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florit, motlle, modelar…
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