musculus broncho esophageus - traducción al árabe
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musculus broncho esophageus - traducción al árabe

1894 FILM
Bucking Broncho (1894 film)

musculus broncho esophageus      
‎ العَضَلَةُ القَصَبِيَّةُ المَريئِيَّة‎
musculus broncho-esophageus NA      
العَضَلَةُ القَصَبِيَّةُ المَريئِيَّة
house mouse         
  • A two-day-old mouse
  • ragdoll]], seen here striking a mouse to stun it during the hunt.
  • Feeding
  • An individually ventilated and sealed cage for laboratory mice
  • Japanese fancy mouse 
(''Mus musculus molssinus'')
  • Infestation of mice. Taxidermy display, [[Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe]], Germany.
  • Fancy mice may be of colours and/or have markings not found in wild mice.
SPECIES OF MAMMAL
Common house mouse; Common House Mouse; Mus musculus; House mice; Mus abbotti; Mus musculis; House Mouse; Mice in research; Mus musculus mykinessiensis; Housemouse; Musc musculus; Common mouse; Eurasian house mice
‎ الفَأْرُ المَنْزِلِيّ‎

Definición

house mouse
¦ noun a greyish-brown mouse found abundantly as a scavenger in human dwellings. [Mus musculus.]

Wikipedia

Bucking Broncho

Bucking Broncho is an 1894 black-and-white silent film from Edison Studios, produced by William K. L. Dickson with William Heise as cinematographer. Filmed on a single reel, using standard 35 mm gauge, it has a 32-second runtime. One of the earliest known films in the Western genre, it is preserved by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and available in the DVD collection More Treasures from American Film Archives (2004).

The film features Lee Martin who was an actual cowboy "bronco rider" and a member of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show. Martin's part was uncredited and it was his only film. Also appearing is Frank Hammitt, another star of the show, who is standing on the fence and firing his revolver. The film is a demonstration of Martin's expert horse riding before a crowd of onlookers although the horse, who was called Sunfish, unseats him at the end of the clip.