FORESTS vs WOOD: NOUN
- Plural form of forest.
- Land that is covered with trees and shrubs
- The trees and other plants in a large densely wooded area
- A growth of trees and other plants usually covering a smaller area than a forest.
- Any of a series of golf clubs used to hit long shots, having a bulbous head made of wood, metal, or graphite, and numbered one to five in order of increasing loft.
- A woodwind.
- An object made of wood, especially.
- A forest.
- This tissue when cut and dried, used especially for building material and fuel.
- Any wind instrument other than the brass instruments
- The trees and other plants in a large densely wooded area
- The hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees
- United States film actress (1938-1981)
- English conductor (1869-1944)
- English writer of novels about murders and thefts and forgeries (1814-1887)
- United States painter noted for works based on life in the Midwest (1892-1942)
- A golf club with a long shaft used to hit long shots; originally made with a wooden head; metal woods are now available
- The secondary xylem of trees and shrubs, lying beneath the bark and consisting largely of cellulose and lignin.
- The substance of trees and the like; the hard fibrous substance which composes the body of a tree and its branches, and which is covered by the bark; timber.
- A large and thick collection of trees; a forest or grove; -- frequently used in the plural.
- In South Africa, an evergreen shrub, or a tree 20 or 30 feet, high, Psychotria Capensis (Grumilea cymosa), having a hard, tough wood, variously useful.
- See fossil cork, under fossil.
- Fig uratively, a crowd, mass, or collection.
- In music, the wooden wind-instruments of an orchestra taken collectively. See wind, n., 5, wind-instrument, and instrument, 3 . Also called wood wind.
- In printing, a wood-block, or wood blocks collectively, as distinguished from a me tallic type or plate of any kind: as, cuts printed from the wood.
- In heraldry, three or four trees grouped together, usually represented as rooted in a mound, which is vert, unless otherwise blazoned. Also called hurst.
- The grain of wood.
- Firewood; cordwood.
- Timber; the trunks or main stems of trees which attain such dimensions as to be fit for architectural and other purposes.
- The substance of trees; the hard fibrous substance which composes the body of a tree and its branches, and which lies between the pith and the bark.
- A large and thick collection of growing trees; a forest: often in the plural, with the same force as the singular.
- The name used in the lumber trade for the timber of deciduous-leaved trees as distinguished from evergreen or coniferous trees, though some, poplar, for instance, are as soft as white pine, while yew and some varieties of yellow pine rank high in hardness, when compared with hard woods. In Tasmania the name is usually confined to the timber of the eucalypts, while in Queensland it is especially applied to a myrtaceous tree, Backhousia Bancroftii.
- In horticulture, any twig or tissue of a plant, whether hard or soft, that is considered in the making of cuttings or some-times, in the ease of garden plants, in the operation of pruning. See hard wood, soft wood.
- An old spelling of
- The fibrous material which makes up the greater part of the stems and branches of trees and shrubby plants, and is found to a less extent in herbaceous stems. It consists of elongated tubular or needle-shaped cells of various kinds, usually interwoven with the shinning bands called silver grain.
- Trees cut or sawed for the fire or other uses.
- A complex acid liquid obtained in the dry distillation of wood, and containing large quantities of acetic acid; hence, specifically, acetic acid. Formerly called pyroligneous acid.
- A delicate flower (Anemone nemorosa) of early spring; -- also called windflower. See Illust. of Anemone.
- A large ant (Formica rufa) which lives in woods and forests, and constructs large nests.
- The cask, keg, or barrel, as distinguished from the bottle: as, wine drawn from the wood.
FORESTS vs WOOD: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Used or suitable for cutting, storing, or working with wood.
- Living, growing, or present in forests.
- Mad; insane; possessed; rabid; furious; frantic.
- Mentally deranged.
- Made or consisting of wood; wooden.
FORESTS vs WOOD: VERB
- Third-person singular simple present indicative form of forest.
- N/A
FORESTS vs WOOD: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To fuel with wood.
- To gather or be supplied with wood.
- To grow mad; to act like a madman; to mad.
- To take or get a supply of wood.
- To cover with trees; forest.
FORESTS vs WOOD: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To supply with wood, or get supplies of wood for.
FORESTS vs WOOD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To sup ply or replenish with wood; get supplies of wood for: as, to wood a steamboat or a loco motive.
- To take in or get supplies of wood.
- To make a noise by scuffling with the feet or by hand-clapping, as students in approval or disapproval of a professor.
- Mad; frantic; furious; angry; enraged; raging.
- To act like a mad man; rave.
- To be fierce or furious; rage.
- Originally made with a wooden head
- (idiom) (out of the woods) Free of a difficult or hazardous situation; in a position of safety or security.
FORESTS vs WOOD: RELATED WORDS
- Lam, Brush, Bushes, Logging, Jungles, Woodlots, Trees, Forestry, Woodlands, Afforest, Wood, Woods, Timberland, Timber, Woodland
- Driftwood, Mahogany, Hardwood, Firewood, Flooring, Plywood, Bamboo, Timbers, Timber, Lumber, Woodwind, Woodwind instrument, Forest, Woody, Wooden
FORESTS vs WOOD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Bos, Model, Lam, Brush, Bushes, Jungles, Woodlots, Forestry, Woodlands, Afforest, Wood, Woods, Timberland, Timber, Woodland
- Heartwood, Driftwood, Mahogany, Hardwood, Flooring, Plywood, Bamboo, Timbers, Timber, Lumber, Woodwind, Woodwind instrument, Forest, Woody, Wooden
FORESTS vs WOOD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- This may consist of two or more national forests or all the forests within a state.
- State and National forests: You can conceal carry in forests, as well as Wildlife Management Areas.
- Application for permission to cut timber in Government forests, or otherwise relating to such forests.
- They share many species in common with bay forests and Atlantic white cedar forests which are also considered here.
- Equatorial Guinea: Special provisions uses have not been Forests are only classified as state, communal and private forests.
- Investments in FSP help protect these forests and provide support to keep working forests intact, healthy, andproductive.
- The BF forests meet these three conditions by displaying many features typical of natural forests.
- Repeated timbering of the forests has restricted older forests to steep, nearly inaccessible slopes.
- Block Forests: random forests for blocks of clinical and omics covariate data.
- Himalayan forests, along withother forests, for their raw materials.
- Fill the wood chip pan with wood chips.
- Heavy as wood looks like real wood because.
- Plus the wood ash from our wood burning farm.
- Bedding Exhibitors must use wood chips or wood shavings.
- Light wood floors tend to bounce light around a space which allows light wood floors to work with almost any other wood finish color!
- Reaction wood, whether compression wood in softwoods or tension wood in hardwoods, tends to shrink excessively parallel to the grain.
- With some wood surfaces, such as teak, wood leading to a chemically weak boundary effect and poor bond tween adhesive and wood.
- Wood, Amber Templeton, Garrett Wood, and Gavin Wood.
- Think of pistachio wood, buffalo horn, juniper wood or olive wood.
- Sheesham wood, acacia wood, mango wood, reclaimed wood, and cane.
FORESTS vs WOOD: QUESTIONS
- Are there campgrounds in Mississippi National Forests?
- Are mature forests renewable or nonrenewable resources?
- Are Quercus seeds recalcitrant in temperate forests?
- Are temperate forests deciduous or evergreen forests?
- How do nonfederal owners of forests benefit directly from their forests?
- Why are temperate forests less productive than tropical wet forests?
- Why equilateral forests are known as evergreen forests?
- Why are equatorial forests known as evergreen forests?
- Why are deciduous forests sometimes called broad leaf forests?
- What are reserved forests and protected forests of India?
- What kind of wood baits do they sell at Wood bait country?
- Should you choose wood look tile or wood grain vinyl flooring?
- What kind of wood is used to make your wood products?
- How do you make a wood burning stove smell like wood?
- How do you glue wood joints that are stronger than wood?
- Do you clean unfinished wood more often than finished wood?
- Do Wood Preservers protect wood from biological threats?
- Can you use liquid wood to consolidate rotted wood?
- Can I substitute pimento wood for Jamaican jerk wood?
- Is teak wood or sheesham wood better for wood furniture?