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Скачать или смотреть Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!

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  • 2014-02-13
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Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!
bethanymotabethanymotacottoncandyfrappucinofrapdiyrecipestarbucksshamrockshakemcdonaldsmcdonaldscookingShamrock Shake (Food)
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Описание к видео Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!

Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! The shamrock refers to the young sprigs of clover or trefoil. It is known as a symbol of Ireland, with St. Patrick having used it as a metaphor for the Christian Trinity, according to legend. The name shamrock is derived from Irish seamróg, which is the diminutive version of t Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! he Irish word for clover (seamair) meaning simply "little clover" or "young clover".[1] Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!
Shamrock is usually considered to refer to either the species Trifolium dubium (lesser clover, Irish: seamair bhuí)[2] or Trifolium repens (white clover, Irish: Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! seamair bhán). However, other three-leaved plants—such as Medicago lupulina, Trifolium pratense, and Oxalis acetosella—are sometimes called shamrocks or clovers. The shamrock was traditionally used for its medicinal properties and was a popular motif in Victorian times. Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!
There is still not a Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!; c Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! onsensus over the precise botanical species of clover that is the "true" shamrock. John Gerard in his herbal of 1597 Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! defined the shamrock as Trifolium pratense or Trifolium pratense flore albo, Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! meaning Red or White Clover. He described the plant in English Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! as 'Three leaved grasse' or 'Medow Trefoile Fail!! No shamrock Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! shake for you!! ', 'which are called in Irish Shamrockes'.[3] The Irish botanist Caleb Threlkeld, writing in 1726 in his work entitled Synopsis Stirpium Hibernicarum or A Treatise on Native Irish Plants followed Gerard in identifying the shamrock as Trifolium pratense, calling it White Field Clover.[4] Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!
The botanist Karl Linnaeus in his 1737 work Flora Lapponica identifies the shamrock as Trifolium pratense, mentioning it by name in a Latinised form Chambroch, with the following curious remark: Hiberni suo Chambroch, quod est Trifolium pratense purpureum, aluntur, celeres & promtissimi roburis (The Irish call it shamrock, which is purple field clover, and which they eat to make them speedy and of nimble strength).[5][6] Linnaeus based his information that the Irish ate shamrock on the comments of English Elizabethan authors such as Edmund Spencer who remarked that the shamrock used to be eaten by the Irish, especially in times of hardship and famine. Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! It has since been argued however, that the Elizabethans were confused by the similarity between the Irish (Gaelic) Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! name for young clover seamróg Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!, and the name for wood sorrel seamsóg.[7] Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!
The situation regarding the identity of the shamrock was further confused by a London botanist James Ebenezer Bicheno, who proclaimed in Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! a dissertation in 1830 that the real shamrock was Oxalis acetosella or Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! Wood Sorrel.[8] Bichino falsely claimed that clover was not a native Irish plant and had only been introduced into Ireland in the middle of the seventeenth century, and based his argument Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! on Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! the same comments by Elizabethan authors that shamrock had been eaten. Bicheno argued that this fitted the wood sorrel better than clover, as wood sorrel was often eaten as a green Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! and used to flavour food. Bicheno's argument has not been generally accepted however, Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!! as the weight of evidence favours a species of clover. Fail!! No shamrock shake for you!!

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