When allowed to remain some time and toferment, it settles into a coarse sort of wine or cider, ratherintoxicating if drank to any excess. oanut, which can be split off in sheets to make the roofs ofhouses, or unravelled into a fibre that will tie like string. Meredith, `Friends and Foes,' p. It is the lastsheep in a catching pen, and consequently a bad one to shear,as the easy ones are picked first.
It destroyedthe scale in nine months. Grant, `Bush Life in Queensland,' vol. ' The name is moremusical than the one in vogue here, and probably equally asdescriptive, as its origin appears to be just as obscure asthat of the word `larrikin. two or three smallgrubs, or a single large one, being given daily.
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