The windings of the river could be distinctly marked by the size of the great eucalypts which fringed the banks, refusing to grow away from its waters.
The vernacular name of gum-trees for the eucalypts is as unaptly given as that of most others of our native plants, on which popular appellations have been bestowed.
There are 120 species, as set forth in Baron von Mueller's `Eucalyptographia, a Descriptive Atlas of the Eucalypts of Australia.
Eucalypts and other trees, during decortication, and which, bec oming exceedingly dry, are readily ignited and used as kindling wood.
Stems of the soaring eucalyptsthat rise Four hundred friendly feet to glad the skies.
Dwarfed eucalypts fringe the tree-limit on Mount Kosciusco, and the soakages in the parched interior are indicated by a line of the same trees, stunted and straggling.
The eucalypts are remarkable for the oil secreted in their leaves, and the large quantity of astringent resin of their bark.
At the foot of the mountain for which I was steering there was a little creek or gully, with some eucalypts where I struck it.
I walked on ahead of the horses with the shovel, to a small gully I saw with the glasses, having some few eucalypts growing in it.
Travelling over casuarina sandhills and some level triodia ground, we found there was a creek with eucalypts on it, but it was quite evident that none of the late showers had fallen there.
The eucalypts of the mallee species thrive in deserts and droughts, but contain water in their roots which only the native inhabitants of the country can discover.
Only two wattles out of many dozens sown here came up, and no eucalypts have appeared, although the seeds of many different kinds were set.
A thick and vigorous clump of eucalypts down the creek induced me first to visit them, but the channel was hopelessly dry.
The higher grade of eucalypts or gum-trees delight in water and a good soil, and nearly always line the banks of watercourses.
To see the romantic falls of the Stevenson and the silver eucalypts of the Black Spur, a partial coach journey is necessary.
The eucalypts survived the fiery ordeal, because of the hardness of their bark; and, when every other creature perished, or had to abandon its litter, the marsupials leaped over the flames with their young in their pouches.
The rush through the twin eucalypts was exhilarating; the steerer of Cobb, a native of the place, cool and confident, enjoyed it immensely.
South Australia contains whole principalities of the ordinary park-like bush of Australia; the eucalypts standing in grass without any undergrowth, either singly or in clumps, as though planted by a landscape gardener.
Descending, you find that the surface is a vegetable canopy formed by stout and hardy creepers and climbers that spread from tree to tree, only the tops of the lofty eucalypts appearing above this mid-air canopy.
Nothing grew for miles but the unfriendly jungle of undergrowth, above which waved the mournful pines and eucalypts of the dark impenetrable forest.
The forest trees, the giant eucalyptsand towering pines, “had a tinge of softer green.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "eucalypts" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.