Pinnate-leaved European perennial having bright blue or white flowers.
(Nautical) a hanging ladder of ropes or chains supporting wooden or metal rungs or steps.
Device for producing a continuous train of large sparks that rise upwards.
Sinônimos
Examples for "jack ladder"
Examples for "jack ladder"
1Audio Australian indie troubadours Jack Ladder and Kirin J. Callinan cross the ditch this week for co-headlining shows in Auckland and Wellington.
1Listen, there are people that are coming down the pilot ladder of the prow.
3You go up that pilot ladder, get on that ship and tell me how many people are still on board.
4'Just a pilot ladder,' he shouted back.
1Then they had her to a place, and showed her Jacob's ladder.
2It is a Jacob's ladder,-orwill be in one moment more.
3Her Jacob's ladder, her stepping-stone to her hopes, lay overturned in a corner.
4At quarter of two Felicia finished a Jacob's ladder in a long purple stocking.
5Generation is the true Jacob's ladder, on which souls are ever ascending or descending.
6One of them knew the whereabouts of Jacob's ladder.
7He waited for her behind a Jacob's ladder.
8Their way is the "highway of the gods," but no Jacob's ladder for wayward man.
9A merchant ship registered in Liverpool lay at anchor in the roads, a Jacob's ladder up her side.
10A reference to Jacob's ladder (Genesis xxviii, 12).
11By the assistance of Jacob's ladder.
12Then he opened his eyes to find he was hanging to a flimsy Jacob's ladder, suspended from the stern.
13The men let the officer lead them as far as Jacob's ladder, and then hurrah for the lee yard-arm!
14Why refer to Jacob's ladder?
15What do we mean by " Jacob's ladder"?
16The first two miles of the Bright Angel Trail was a sort of Jacob's ladder, zigzagging at an unrelenting pitch.
Translations for Jacob's ladder