Tak' dem to capo in testa for show extrra gooda faith in nama da Arma of Zhoostees.
And then the Parmesan, "I will put him to sleep and bear him to the capo in testa in our name!
You betook yourself to the capo in testa of the Honorable Society rather than to your old friends of the Arm or even to this district, and to him pointed out the whereabouts of the traitor.
Seeds numerous; testa membranaceous or crustaceous; embryo usually slender and curved in fleshy albumen; cotyledons semiterete, shorter than the radicle turned toward the hilum.
Seed suspended; testa membranaceous; embryo incurved, in thin fleshy albumen, cotyledons equal or unequal, longer than the incumbent radicle.
I called on the Abbe Testa Grossa, whom I had known at Venice in 1753.
Abbe Testa Grossa recognized me and gave me the most gracious reception, but when he heard of what had befallen me he seemed much annoyed.
Ero connosciuto per una testa singolare, I was known to be a singular man.
The later returns are in Testade Nevill (Record Commission, 1807) and in the Record Office volumes of Feudal Aids, arranged under counties.
Stephen Testa and John Ungaret, my two attendants, were very much rejoiced at seeing me again, as they believed me entirely lost, and we rested two days at this place before entering upon the desert.
An old gentleman here, one Gaetano Testa Grossa had a young wife, whose name was Mary, and who brought him a son when he was more than seventy years old.
Signor Testa was a tall, thin man, of rather cold and stately manners, with a fine-looking, noble head covered with curly brown hair.
The fact was that Testa had not the least sense of humor in his composition, and so he could not understand what had happened.
By these failings, Testa alienated the minds of his contemporaries, so that neither in reputation nor in employment was he so successful as many others; and his perpetual complaints occasioned doubts even of his sanity.
We might refer to other classes of fungi developing themselves in the testa of hard seeds, and in the interior of acorns, sweet chestnuts, etc.
Defn: That which naturally invests or covers another thing, as the testa or the tegmen of a seed; specifically (Anat.
It is derived from the Latin testa (earthen pot), which term was early applied to the fining pot, or crucible, in which metals are melted for trial and refinement.
I believe your head is always cold, for you seldom pull off your crédere testa sempre freddo perchè raraménte leváre hat.
These structural peculiarities of the testa in different plants have relation to the scattering of the seed and its germination upon a suitable nidus.
Entire anatropal seed of the Orange (Citrus Aurantium), with its rugose or wrinkled testa, and the raphe r ramifying in the thickness of the testa on one side.
The cells of the testa are often coloured, and have projections and appendages of various kinds.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "testa" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: armor; carapace; cortex; mail; plate; shell; shield; test