Use "thicket" in a sentence

1. He hid in a thicket.

2. The thicket quivered, then moved.

3. Chaparral definition is - a thicket of dwarf evergreen oaks; broadly : a dense impenetrable thicket of shrubs or dwarf trees

4. Words associated with Brakiest Synonyms of brake boscage: : a growth of trees or shrubs : thicket boskage: : a growth of trees or shrubs : thicket bosk: : a small wooded area bosque: : a small wooded area bosquet: : thicket brushwood: : wood of small branches especially when cut or broken chaparral: : a thicket of dwarf evergreen oaks coppice: : copse …

5. 4 synonyms for Copse: brush, coppice, thicket, brushwood

6. 4 synonyms for Coppice: brush, copse, thicket, brushwood

7. Pinker in the face behind the thicket of white beard.

8. A thicket of small trees or shrubs ; a coppice.

9. With beautiful branches like a shady thicket, lofty in stature;

10. A fox darted out of the midst of the thicket.

11. 22 A fox darted out of the midst of the thicket.

12. While the lioness was away, the cubs lay hidden in a thicket.

13. They had sprinted together through the thicket until they reached a flatland.

14. Chokecherry is a native, perennial, deciduous, woody, thicket-forming large erect shrub or small tree

15. Copse a thicket of underwood and small trees; the underwood of a wood or forest.

16. Cephalus looking keenly around saw something move in the thicket ahead and threw the javelin.

17. A Copse is a thicket of bushes or a small stand of trees

18. Adjoins Big Thicket National Preserve! Property Description: 1 st time open market offering

19. The fox hid in the thicket where the dogs could not reach it.

20. Synonyms for Boscage include thicket, copse, coppice, brake, covert, brushwood, chaparral, bosk, bosque and bosquet

21. Over the millennia it has come to be surrounded by a dense thicket of folklore.

22. Boscage A place set with trees or mass of shrubbery, a grove or thicket

23. Thinking I was going to be pulled into some thicket and raped and murdered.

24. He spent the morning trying to work his way through a thicket of statistics.

25. They broke into a trot and found Mary standing in the middle of a thicket.

26. For a long time Midnight crouched in the dark thicket, swimming between consciousness and fantasy.

27. Copse a thicket of underwood and small trees; the underwood of a wood or forest

28. Synonyms for Boskage include brushwood, thicket, coppice, copse, brake, covert, boscage, chaparral, undergrowth and bosk

29. It detached itself from the thicket and reached rose-thorn fingers into the hard earth.

30. Reacher and the gunner disappeared through the thicket of trees between us and the wreckage.

31. He would let it leap from the grass into the thicket to burn the understory shrubs.

32. Buckbrush is a slender, erect or ascending, thicket-forming shrub that spreads by roots, usually 2–4 feet tall

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34. A group of Bryozoan colonies is called a thicket and sometimes looks like a smaller version of a coral reef

35. WILD ANIMALS I HAVE KNOWN ERNEST THOMPSON SETON Immediately flames leapt in great tongues from the Brambly thicket beyond the reeds

36. Buckbrush is a slender, erect or ascending, thicket-forming shrub that spreads by roots, usually 2–4 feet tall.

37. The thicket leads into a compact marshy wetland, the fifth biome,[http://Sentencedict.com] which finally emptied into the lagoon.

38. The thicket still contained remnants of the raspberry and blackberry patches that always come in right after a clearcut.

39. A private, gated entry prefaces the tree-lined drive where rolling pastures are glimpsed through the thicket of trees at Chigoe Highlands

40. To put their project together, the two charities had to manoeuvre within a thicket of legal and professional restraints.

41. The brown colour phase occurs in coastal and high altitude forest, woodland and thicket, and grassland areas (i.e. Nyanga, Zimbabwe).

42. Tears coursed down her cheeks and she ran blindly down the wild jungle of the grounds parallel to the thicket.

43. At a twist in the river lay the spinney, a clump of birch saplings sprouting through a thicket of bramble.

44. Bush itself is a thicket of Scandinavian (Old Norse Buskr), Germanic (Old High German busc), and Romanic (Medieval Latin busca) influences and cognates

45. 23 Tears coursed down her cheeks and she ran Blindly down the wild jungle of the grounds parallel to the thicket.

46. She was hedged about as if by an impenetrable thicket, so that they were unable to get any help to her.

47. If it had been carved to life all the detail would have disappeared in a dense and unreadable thicket of vegetation.

48. Ambulating back to his village he senses sap ascending a thicket of teak-- the unsullied sun at the nape of his neck.

49. What does Coppice mean? A thicket or grove of small trees or shrubs, especially one maintained by periodic cutting or pruning to encourage sucke

50. Comparatively intact forest layer, the clear layer of the arbores, thicket and vert. Obvious continuity of vegetation community's distribution and poor productivity of community.

51. Coppice, also called Copse, or Thicket, a dense grove of small trees or shrubs that have grown from suckers or sprouts rather than from seed

52. Aquiver definition, in a state of trepidation or vibrant agitation; trembling; quivering (usually used predicatively): The bamboo thicket was Aquiver with small birds and insects

53. A private, gated entry prefaces the tree-lined drive where rolling pastures are glimpsed through the thicket of trees at Chigoe Highlands

54. As nouns the difference between copse and Coppice is that copse is a thicket of small trees or shrubs while Coppice is a grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth and ensure a reliable supply of timber see copse

55. The surname Bush is a topographical one, coming from the Old English busc or Buskr, describing someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket

56. Backwoodsmen:Stockmen and Hunters along a BIg Thicket Valley presents a detailed social history of the back-country stockmen, hunters, and woodsmen of the Neches River in southeastern Texas

57. Scientific name: Hippophae rhamnoides Sea-Buckthorn is a spiny, thicket-forming shrub of sand dunes on the east coast of England, but has also been planted elsewhere

58. My company, we were fighting in this thicket, there was this wounded rebel officer, who was trying to crawl away from the fire which was gaining on him.

59. In the following initial phase, comparable to thicket and pole stands, the absolute and relative growth rates increase exponentially and indicate the forming of slightly uneven-aged stand structures.

60. Biologists call the kind of habitat that New England Cottontails need “early successional” – other names for this and several closely related habitat types include thicket, shrubland, and young forest

61. A thicket or dense growth of small trees or bushes, esp one regularly trimmed back to stumps so that a continual supply of small poles and firewood is Explanation of Coppices

62. Definition of canebrake : a thicket of cane Examples of canebrake in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web The forest hid behind pioneer vegetation, the same Canebrakes and cecropia trees over and over.

63. When they were come within the chase to a great thicket fortressed about with bryers and thornes, they Compassed round with their Dogs and beset every place with nets : by and by warning was given to

64. 1922, Williams, Margery, The Velveteen Rabbit: Near by he could see the thicket of raspberry canes, growing tall and close like a tropical jungle, in whose shadow he had played with the Boy on Bygone mornings

65. Now the first time the Buckras run Bruh Deer with the hounds, he didn't know nothin about them. And he just lie down in his bed in the thicket on the edge of the broom-grass field

66. John, in visage, in shape, in hue, as unlike the dark, Acerb, and caustic little professor, as the fruit of the Hesperides might be unlike the sloe in the wild thicket; as the high-couraged but tractable

67. English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

68. The name origin is either Norse-Viking, deriving from the pre 9th Century "Buskr", or the Olde English pre 7th Century "busc"; in both cases it is topographical for one who lived by a particularly distinctive copse or thicket

69. The average gestation period is around 110 days; the female gives birth to a litter of between one and four cubs in a secluded den, which may be a thicket, a reed-bed, a cave, or some other sheltered area, usually away from the pride.

70. "Backwoodsmen" or "frontiersmen," the first Anglo-Americancolonizers ofthe area.'As a number ofauthors have stated: "for the fitst one or two generations following settlement, settlers' impact on the Big Thicket was slight, with vegetation rapidly reclaimingsmall buildingsites or farmlands

71. 1 English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

72. 1 English: topographic name for someone who lived by a bushy area or thicket, from Middle English bush(e) ‘bush’ (probably from Old Norse Buskr, or an unrecorded Old English busc); alternatively, it may derive from Old Norse Buski used as a personal name

73. Dweller near a bush or a thicket of bushes, a wood or a grove, from the Middle English bushe (probably from either the Old English word busc or the Old Norse Buskr), meaning "bush."; Dweller at the sign of a bush (usually a wine merchant).

74. I am not depressed.In him, to hale him high or hurl Aheap,Goddess and Goatfoot hourly wrestled sore;Hourly the immortal prevailing more:Till one hot noon saw Meliboeus peepFrom thicket-sprays to where his full-blown dame,In circle by the lusty friskers gripped,Laughed the showered rose-leaves while her limbs were stripped