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Example sentences for "deciduous trees"

  • Deciduous trees are so called because their leaves fall at the beginning of winter.

  • By way of contrast with that of the conifers, the wood of deciduous trees is called hard, though many kinds are quite soft, and the trees themselves hardwoods.

  • Nests are placed, preferably, near water, in evergreen or deciduous trees, and at heights varying from six to forty feet.

  • Gairdners place their nests at inconsiderable heights in deciduous trees, and those, if possible, among thick growths on moist ground.

  • A more natural limit is marked by the presence of deciduous trees (trees which shed their leaves).

  • The Mountain region, or region of deciduous trees.

  • Treat them boldly; put strong kinds out in glades; imagine colonies of Daffodils among the Oak and Beech Ferns, fringed by early Aconite, in the spots overshadowed by the branches of deciduous trees.

  • It may be placed quite under the branches of deciduous trees, will come up and flower when the trees are naked, will have its foliage developed before the leaves come on the trees, and be afterwards hidden from sight.

  • The plants commonly grow in tufts on stumps or dead trunks of deciduous trees in or near woods.

  • It is plentiful in patches upon branches and boles of deciduous trees.

  • In case of evergreens, the least exposure of the roots is liable to result disastrously, even more so than in case of deciduous trees.

  • I have seen this succeed with large deciduous trees.

  • It is to the Coniferae, indeed, that belong the only hardy evergreen trees which in stature and size rival the large deciduous trees of cool temperate latitudes.

  • If the trees are simply to be transplanted from one position in the garden to another, the work may be begun in the case of deciduous trees as soon as the leaves turn colour and commence to fall.

  • Nests are placed in deciduous trees, in forks and crotches six to 30 feet high.

  • Nests are placed 20 or more feet high in coniferous or deciduous trees.

  • Nests are placed six to 30 feet high, but usually about 12 feet, in forks or saddled on a branch, in deciduous trees.

  • The sap of deciduous trees--those which shed their leaves at stated seasons--is lacking in this element, and its constituents vary greatly in the different species.

  • A few males were heard singing from the topmost branches of tall, gigantic, deciduous trees, and were also seen to fly into very tall pines.

  • It nests mainly in the muskegs in tamarack and spruce trees, but occasionally in deciduous trees close to a muskeg.

  • Deep ravines, down which trickle little streams, and the slopes of which support good stands of deciduous trees, with plenty of shrubbery and bushes for cover, are favorite resorts.

  • The nests are built on dead or green trees, and on savins or deciduous trees, at varying heights.

  • The eastern flanks of the tables are, by contrast, less cliff-forming and less slumped and are generally well forested with coniferous and deciduous trees.

  • Deciduous trees grew in the bottom of the draw, but the slopes above supported ponderosa pine and juniper.

  • Occurs on the inner bark of deciduous trees, especially of oak.

  • The fruit appears in June on decaying logs and stumps of various species of deciduous trees, conifers, etc.

  • Found everywhere on decaying wood of all sorts, more particularly on that of deciduous trees.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "deciduous trees" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    brotherly love; carbon dioxid; deciduous trees; economic growth; falls short; formerly known; garden party; healed them; hoping thus; its author; mild winters; neque enim; order business; political opinions; queer sort; several generations; she and; state occasions; subterranean passage; the midst; then marched; turn round