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All ferns synonyms

fern
F f

noun ferns

  • thicket — a thick or dense growth of shrubs, bushes, or small trees; a thick coppice.
  • scrub — to rub hard with a brush, cloth, etc., or against a rough surface in washing.
  • shrubbery — a planting of shrubs: He hit the croquet ball into the shrubbery.
  • undergrowth — low-lying vegetation or small trees growing beneath larger trees; underbrush.
  • groveSir George, 1820–1900, English musicologist.
  • cover — If you cover something, you place something else over it in order to protect it, hide it, or close it.
  • coppice — A coppice is a small group of trees growing very close to each other.
  • hedge — a row of bushes or small trees planted close together, especially when forming a fence or boundary; hedgerow: small fields separated by hedges.
  • copse — A copse is a small group of trees growing very close to each other.
  • dingle — a deep, narrow cleft between hills; shady dell.
  • sedge — any rushlike or grasslike plant of the genus Carex, growing in wet places. Compare sedge family.
  • underwood — woody shrubs or small trees growing among taller trees.
  • brushwood — Brushwood consists of small pieces of wood that have broken off trees and bushes.
  • fern — a female given name.
  • gorse — any spiny shrub of the genus Ulex, of the legume family, native to the Old World, especially U. europaeus, having rudimentary leaves and yellow flowers and growing in waste places and sandy soil.
  • bracken — Bracken is a large plant with leaves that are divided into many thin sections. It grows on hills and in woods.
  • spinney — a small wood or thicket.
  • chaparral — (in the southwestern US) a dense growth of shrubs and trees, esp evergreen oaks
  • plant — any member of the kingdom Plantae, comprising multicellular organisms that typically produce their own food from inorganic matter by the process of photosynthesis and that have more or less rigid cell walls containing cellulose, including vascular plants, mosses, liverworts, and hornworts: some classification schemes may include fungi, algae, bacteria, blue-green algae, and certain single-celled eukaryotes that have plantlike qualities, as rigid cell walls or photosynthesis.
  • scrubs — to rub hard with a brush, cloth, etc., or against a rough surface in washing.
  • chaparrals — Plural form of chaparral.
  • coppices — Plural form of coppice.
  • copses — Plural form of copse.
  • covers — coversed sine
  • dingles — Plural form of dingle.
  • groves — a small wood or forested area, usually with no undergrowth: a grove of pines.
  • boscage — a mass of trees and shrubs; thicket
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