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Common names include dyer's rocket, dyer's weed, weld, woold, and yellow weed.
Limited evidence suggests the use of weld (Reseda luteola), also called mignonette or dyer's rocket before the Iron Age, but it was an important dye of the ancient Mediterranean and Europe and is indigenous to England.
Common names include dyer's rocket, dyer's weed, weld, woold, and yellow weed.
She started by asking who knew what a weld was.
Just a few more critical welds and they'd be done.
Now, just a few more welds and she would be ready to test her results.
On the finished car, the weld lines cannot be seen or felt.
White, Weld asked us if we wanted to take a third of the deal to their two-thirds.
A little less than a year after taking office, Weld's government resigned.
"Another hour and we'll have finished the last spot weld."
On January 8, the problem with the weld was corrected.
Manufacturers also include the strength that the weld must be.
"We have only five years before it will be too late to make the weld.
Warren Weld, the other name on the door, spoke up.
Sound welds are readily made (with good process design and control).
Tuesday Weld was at one stage mentioned as a possible female lead.
We've seen Weld come up empty in the effort to get our public schools going again after years of budget cuts.
Still, even Weld acknowledges that he's trying to pull off a long shot.
"Miss Weld will not be in until late this evening.
For this reason, Weld was under tremendous pressure to drop out of the race.
The process is limited to straight welds in horizontal position.
"I don't know what Weld's tax cuts are going to do to prepare our children for the future."
That weld always turns out to be the strongest part of the block.
Just two years ago, Weld was very much in.
She is the mother of five children by Weld.
The corresponding weld can still be seen near the signal box building.
Mr. Weld was also told exactly what he would say.
The home of Woold, an English slave trader, is located in southern Togo.
Litil basturd woold be roseted meet by now if I hadnae found the way up heer.
Before the city was liberated, there was a tank battle on 29 March in one of the townships called Woold, with sixty Sherman tanks.
March 31 is marked as the official day to remember the liberation of Winterswijk, despite of the fact that, in the late afternoon of March 30 parts of Miste and Woold were already liberated.
I squinted out the window at the yellow weeds.
They lay together in the crackling yellow weeds, clinging.
There was yellow weed on the line but the old man knew that only made an added drag and he was pleased.
There was a patch of winter-thin, pale yellow weeds between the industrial park and the water.
He got his feet up under him, and knew that Richard's back was probably visible above the yellow weeds and tall grass.
The paving was cracked and grimy, I noticed, with tufts of yellow weeds growing through.
Swathes of his coat came roiling upward with the disturbed water, brushing the surface like yellow weed.
He flew around Thomas Hudson¡ s head while he steered, then headed off toward another patch of yellow weed on the water.
More surprisingly, they also waded into the lake, and began to take mouthfuls of the yellow weed, which hung down from their faces like beards.
When he reached the border of high yellow weeds alongside the edge of the road, he inched forward on his belly and looked out.
Before I'd come to a full stop, Darla Jean scrambled out of the car and fell to her knees in the yellowed weeds.
There was a wino lying up in there among the yellow weeds and empty cans and dusty old bottles.
And though I was there in November, roses were everywhere, like pink and yellow weeds, climbing church walls, spilling into cafes.
Common names include dyer's rocket, dyer's weed, weld, woold, and yellow weed.
The sister was being pulled down by the yellow weeds; creepers and thorns clutching tight on her body, dragging her down to the world beneath the soil.
Reseda luteola, also known as dyers weed, yellow weed or weld, has been used as a yellow dye from neolithic times.
They started off through a field of rough yellow weeds to the hog pen, a five-foot boarded square full of shoats, which they intended to ease him over into.
These bare places were grown up with dingy, yellow weeds, hiding innumerable tomato cans; innumerable children played upon them, chasing one another here and there, screaming and fighting.
Her eyes flashed yellow, just the once, and then the ground was opening up beneath her feet, and weeds were pulling at her, yellow weeds, spiked with thorns.
Twisted yellow weeds sprouted on the banks and curious, small creatures scuttled for safety when the second probe popped and murmured and thrust forth a jerking, ratcheting scoop.
He got to the end of the block and found himself looking across the town's other main street at a dying lawn filled with yellow weeds from which peeked fiberglass statues of Disney-like fawns.
The spray of the water drenched that way, feeding small pools in the uneven surface, and strips of yellow weed trailed in slimy ribbons back below the surface of the waves.
By now, they were traveling by the side of a lake whose surface was almost entirely covered by a bright yellow weed, while on its far side was a vertical cliff, perhaps a thousand feet high.
Last time I saw my sister, close up, intimate, in the Vurt world, she was falling through a hole in a garden, clutched at by yellow weeds, cut by thorns, screaming my name out loud.
In another month or two, crops of scorched yellow weeds would blanket the hillside, but that year the spring showers had lasted longer than usual, nudging their way into early summer, and the grass was still green, peppered with tangles of wildflowers.
Data sheet with pictures of weld (Reseda luteola L.) (in German)
Reseda luteola (I)
Its roots have been used to make a yellow dye called "weld" since the first millennium BC, although the related plant Reseda luteola was more widely used for that purpose.
Limited evidence suggests the use of weld (Reseda luteola), also called mignonette or dyer's rocket before the Iron Age, but it was an important dye of the ancient Mediterranean and Europe and is indigenous to England.
The dyers of Lincoln, a cloth town in the high Middle Ages, produced the cloth by dyeing it with woad (Isatis tinctoria) to give it a strong blue, then overdyeing it yellow with weld (Reseda luteola) or dyers' broom, Genista tinctoria.