white pine in English

noun
1
any of a number of coniferous trees with whitish timber, in particular.
The Tree of Peace, a great white pine , is believed by the Iroquois to have been planted by the Peacemaker, who originally inspired the formation of the Iroquois Confederacy centuries before.

Use "white pine" in a sentence

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

1. The disease is called white pine Blisterous

2. His materials were white pine, mahogany, cherry.

3. 19 He carves his figures from white pine.

4. White pine is considered the best wood for Clapboards; cedar, cypress, and spruce are also used.

5. At Beeline, we offer you our manufactured woodenware made from Eastern White Pine or Ponderosa Pine

6. View North Georgia's finest lumber selection, including white pine lumber, white pine beams, d-log siding, tongue and groove, shiplap, Chinked wood, blue and buggy (beetle kill) tongue and groove, branded whiskey barrels, poplar bark shakes, cedar shakes, and more!

7. Like other European and Asian white pines, Swiss pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola).

8. Like other European and Asian white pines, Siberian pine is very resistant to white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola).

9. Black currants, while Rhode Island prohibits several species of Ribes and requires permits for other types and for importation of white pine

10. 10 Studies have shown that the white pine and loblolly pine are 2 kinds of trees that grow well on marginal land.

11. 17 Studies have shown that the white pine and loblolly pine are two kinds of trees that grow well on marginal land.

12. 13 Studies have shown that the white pine and loblolly pine are two 2 kinds of trees that grow well on marginal land.

13. There, in a very secluded and shaded spot, under a spreading white pine, there was yet a clean, firm sward to sit on.

14. The white pine, pictured above, was the first tree to fully repopulate, and by 19 forest cover had increased by 70 percent—and still continues to grow.

15. Pin oaks are most commonly affected by Chlorosis, although many other trees and shrubs (e.g., white oak, red maple, white pine and Rhododendron spp.) are also very susceptible.

16. Pin oaks are most commonly affected by Chlorosis, although many other trees and shrubs (e.g., white oak, red maple, white pine and Rhododendron spp.) are also very susceptible.

17. Choose a Bellows made of maple hardwood and leather, white pine, or even a hand-carved tool that can add distinctive charm to your hearth while hanging by the fireplace.

18. Conifers with large cones, such as eastern white pine trees (Pinus strobus), can be some of the messiest trees to grow, creating more landscape maintenance than some people care to engage in

19. The white-pine blister rust fungus, Cronartium ribicola Fisch. in Rabenh., continues to spread in North America, utilizing various aecial (primary) and telial (alternate) hosts, some of which have only recently been discovered.

20. The seed cones are 6–11 cm long, with thick, woody scales; the seeds are large, about 8–15 mm long, with a vestigial 3 mm wing, similar to the related Chinese white pine (Pinus armandii).

21. So yes, pine trees are Conifers; we all know about pine cones! Cones on Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus) photo by Janice LeCocq However, some Conifers, such a yews, have fleshy cone that look more like fruit.

22. Black Currants (Blackcurrants) Blackcomb (Ojebyn x Titania) Blackcomb is a high yielding new variety that has high levels of resistance to foliar diseases - mildew, White Pine Blister Rust - , vigorous growth habit and tolerance to late spring frost

23. It is related to the Eastern white pine (Pinus strobus), differing from it in having larger cones, slightly longer-lasting leaves (2–3 years, rather than 1.5–2 years) with more prominent stomatal bands, and a somewhat denser and narrower habit.

24. The Black currants will make an important contribution to our line." The federal government had banned the growing of black and red currants in 1911 when the burgeoning logging industry put pressure on lawmakers to eliminate the currants because they were thought to be an intermediate host of white pine blister rust.

25. Above the firs come the tamarack, constituting the bulk of the lower Alpine forest; the hardy long-lived mountain pine; the red cedar or juniper, growing even on the Baldest rocks; the beautiful hemlock spruce; the still higher white pine, nut pine, needle pine; and finally, at io,000 to 12,000 ft., the dwarf pine, which grows in a tangle on the earth over which one walks, and may not show for