1When he perceived the mothers gaining on them, he cut the liana.
2He extracts the poison from a certain liana-thepaullinia pinnata-whichhe calls timbó.
3This animated liana turned out to be a pale-green snake, the Dryophis fulgida.
4In the end I used a length of liana bark.
5I carry my world with me in a little net made of liana fibers.
6Emmeline was sitting nearby, stringing together some gorgeous blossoms on a tendril of liana.
7There was strong spatial and temporal variation in liana biomass within and across the plots.
8This is by using a poisonous liana called Timbó (Paullinia pinnata).
9As for this liana, it is a lien between us, and so you will see!
10This liana grows in profusion on the humid declivities of the mountains of Unturan and Achivaquery.
11This tendency of the sap to ascend is well shown in another plant, the water liana.
12The liana was for the purpose of stringing the fish on, should the catch be large.
13The next morning, before dawn, the liana was flung down the side of the pit again.
14When first noticed, it was passing up the liana, for the latter slanted upwards between the trees.
15This species of liana is celebrated among the Indians, and serves for making baskets and weaving mats.
16Then he came out, spear in one hand, and half a fathom of liana in the other.