The order Typhaceae is included by many botanists in Aroideae; and indeed, the difference between them consists principally in the Bullrusheshaving no spathe.
At last we struck a place where the water was quite deep, the bottom soft and the bullrushes so thick that we could scarcely wade through them.
Bullrushes and brooklime are also good, but the bullrushes must be planted judiciously.
She found herself on the edge of a bay where bullrusheswere thick.
It was dusk when the chase reached the river bank, and I have no doubt the bullrushes presented quite a natural appearance.
You see all these bullrushes everywhere--clouds of them, all along the river?
The next morning, while the place was being thoroughly searched, we came upon the spot where these bullrushes had been cut down, and we found them caught in the low boughs of a tree, drifting down the river.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "bullrushes" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.