The Firre and Pine bee trees that grow in many places, shooting up exceeding high, especially the Pine: they doe afford good masts, good board, Rozin and Turpentine.
Their houses are of wood without any lime or stone, built very close and warme with firre trees plained and piled one vpon another.
Likewise of Tarre they make a great quantitie out of their firre trees in the conntrey of Duyna and Smolensko, whereof much is sent abroad.
Sidenote: Great abundance ofFirre trees floting in the sea.
The trees for the most in those South parts are Firre trees Pine and Cypresse, all yeelding Gumme and Turpentine.
Firre quarters foure square meeting at the top, and the skins sewed together with sinews, and laid thereupon: they are so pitched vp, that the entrance into them is alwayes South or against the Sunne.
Vpon the hils grew high Firretrees vnarmed, and the weeping Larix, whereon Turpentine is made, and such like.
Which hierogliphis the braunches excepted because I know not whether they were of Firre tree, Pineapple, Larix or Iuniper, or such like: I thus interpret.
But the Firre and Pinetree from their fruits doe naturally dictate this position.
Thus are also disposed the triangular foliations, in the conicall fruit of the firre tree, orderly shadowing and protecting the winged seeds below them.
Firre trees fit for masts of ships, some very tall and great.
The ground of it is very rocky: and vpon it there is great store of firre trees, and in some places red; and about the shore it hath great abundance of cod fish.
There are as faire and tallfirre trees growing therein, as in any other part of Newfoundland.
The Island of Ramea we tooke to be like ground as Brions Island, hauing also abundance of firre trees.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "firre" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.