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mako

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MAKO 桜井 真子
Mako Sakurai
Birthday
BirthplaceTokyo, Japan
Occupation
Voice actress, Singer

mako

1
any shark of the genus Isurus, esp I. glaucus of Indo-Pacific and Australian seas: family Isuridae

mako

2, mako-mako
NZ another name for the bellbird, Anthornis melanura

mako

3, mako-mako
a small evergreen New Zealand tree, Aristotelia serrata: family Elaeocarpaceae
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Makó

 

a city in southeastern Hungary, in Csongrád Megye (Csongrád County). Located on the Maros (Mureş) River. Population, 30,000 (1970). The city is a railroad junction and the center of an agricultural region (specializing in the cultivation of high-grade onions). Makó has a food-processing industry, including flour milling and sausage products, and agricultural machine building.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
One way of making a fence both attractive and productive is to plant it with cultivated blackberries, and the hybrid berries like Japanese wineberry, loganberry and tayberry.
Adding a measure of style to the AmbulMate is--in addition to its sleek frame--the range of colors in which it is available: cobalt blue, champagne, teal, and wineberry. The Ambul-Mate walker, says AES, can be found at certain home health-care dealers, hospitals, nursing homes, and occupational/physical therapist offices in North America, Australia, Japan, Italy, and the United Kingdom.
Less well-known, but equally easy to grow, is the Japanese wineberry, Rubus phoenicolasius.
They tasted (blindfolded) a loganberry, a tayberry, a sunberry and a wineberry.
Maqui berry (Aristotelia chilensis), otherwise known as Chilean Wineberry, is native to the Patagonia region of Argentina and Chile.
Given my passion for reds, I wouldn't want to miss the Japanese wineberry (Rubus phoenicolasius).
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