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All woodlot synonyms

wood lot
W w

noun woodlot

  • jungle β€” a novel (1906) by Upton Sinclair.
  • park β€” Mungo [muhng-goh] /ˈmΚŒΕ‹ goʊ/ (Show IPA), 1771–1806? Scottish explorer in Africa.
  • thicket β€” a thick or dense growth of shrubs, bushes, or small trees; a thick coppice.
  • timber β€” the wood of growing trees suitable for structural uses.
  • wood β€” Grant, 1892–1942, U.S. painter.
  • woodland β€” a city in N central California.
  • backwoods β€” If you refer to an area as the backwoods, you mean that it is a long way from large towns and is isolated from modern life.
  • brake β€” Brakes are devices in a vehicle that make it go slower or stop.
  • chase β€” If you chase someone, or chase after them, you run after them or follow them quickly in order to catch or reach them.
  • clump β€” A clump of things such as trees or plants is a small group of them growing together.
  • coppice β€” A coppice is a small group of trees growing very close to each other.
  • copse β€” A copse is a small group of trees growing very close to each other.
  • cover β€” If you cover something, you place something else over it in order to protect it, hide it, or close it.
  • covert β€” Covert activities or situations are secret or hidden.
  • grove β€” Sir George, 1820–1900, English musicologist.
  • growth β€” the act or process, or a manner of growing; development; gradual increase.
  • shelter β€” something beneath, behind, or within which a person, animal, or thing is protected from storms, missiles, adverse conditions, etc.; refuge.
  • stand β€” (of a person) to be in an upright position on the feet.
  • timberland β€” land covered with timber-producing forests.
  • weald β€” The, a region in SE England, in Kent, Surrey, and Essex counties: once a forest area; now an agricultural region.
  • woods β€” the hard, fibrous substance composing most of the stem and branches of a tree or shrub, and lying beneath the bark; the xylem.
  • wildwood β€” a wood growing in the wild or natural state; forest.
  • trees β€” a plant having a permanently woody main stem or trunk, ordinarily growing to a considerable height, and usually developing branches at some distance from the ground.
  • forest β€” Lee, 1873–1961, U.S. inventor of radio, telegraphic, and telephonic equipment.
  • hardwood β€” the hard, compact wood or timber of various trees, as the oak, cherry, maple, or mahogany.
  • log β€” Mathematics. logarithm.
  • baulk β€” the space, usually 29 inches deep, between the baulk line and the bottom cushion
  • balk β€” If you balk at something, you definitely do not want to do it or to let it happen.
  • beam β€” If you say that someone is beaming, you mean that they have a big smile on their face because they are happy, pleased, or proud about something.
  • board β€” A board is a flat, thin, rectangular piece of wood or plastic which is used for a particular purpose.
  • boom β€” If there is a boom in the economy, there is an increase in economic activity, for example in the amount of things that are being bought and sold.
  • club β€” A club is an organization of people interested in a particular activity or subject who usually meet on a regular basis.
  • frame β€” a border or case for enclosing a picture, mirror, etc.
  • girder β€” a large beam, as of steel, reinforced concrete, or timber, for supporting masonry, joists, purlins, etc.
  • mast β€” the fruit of the oak and beech or other forest trees, used as food for hogs and other animals.
  • plank β€” a long, flat piece of timber, thicker than a board.
  • pole β€” Reginald, 1500–58, English cardinal and last Roman Catholic archbishop of Canterbury.
  • rafter β€” a flock, especially of turkeys.
  • rib β€” one of a series of curved bones that are articulated with the vertebrae and occur in pairs, 12 in humans, on each side of the vertebrate body, certain pairs being connected with the sternum and forming the thoracic wall.
  • stake β€” something that is wagered in a game, race, or contest.
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