dry wood in English

wood whose natural juices have dried up (wood which is not freshly cut)

Use "dry wood" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dry wood" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dry wood", or refer to the context using the word "dry wood" in the English Dictionary.

1. Dry wood burns easily.

2. Dry wood makes a good blaze.

3. There' s dry wood behind the stables

4. The dry wood blazed up at the touch of a match.

5. Rhyn scavenged for what dry wood he could find and took the Armful …

6. Their skin has shriveled over their bones;+ it has become like dry wood.

7. To undergo combustion or be consumed as fuel: The dry wood Burned quickly

8. The outcome of the experiment shows the specific heat of dry wood is independent on species.

9. Briquettes vs Logs It can be hard to source a dry wood fuel at a reasonable price

10. Less usual foods include dried-out meat and animal carcasses, specimens in insect collections, and dry wood.

11. 10 If you focus the sun's rays on dry wood with a burning-glass, it will start burning.

12. Dry wood calibrations demonstrated strong predictive relationships with R2p ranging from 0.87 (air-dry density) to 0.95 (stiffness).

13. He snaps it across his knee, as a man breaks the dry wood of a fagot, and casts it into the fire.

14. The Qing army thereupon piled dry wood along the fort's wooden walls and when they began to light it, Tolbuzin surrendered (exact date uncertain).

15. Temperature and length changes were proportional only for oven-dry and air-dry wood. Cocfficients of thermal contraction were therefore calculated only for these moisture contents.

16. 21 And there could be no light, because of the darkness, neither candles, neither torches; neither could there be fire kindled with their fine and exceedingly dry wood, so that there could not be any light at all;

17. Remembering the quantity of Combustible objects in the vestry--the straw, the papers, the packing-cases, the dry wood, the old worm-eaten presses--all the probabilities, in my estimation, point to the fire as the result of an accident with his matches or his light.

18. Remember, when you begin to make the Fire of dry Wood, that your Vessels must be covered with the aforesaid Paste, and wrapped about with Linen Cloths, and the Phials well luted to the Beaks of the Alembicks with the same luting, putting a Quill between the Beak of the Alembick and the Phial; for whilst the Fire operates, the Air will for the