Honey locust wood is hard, coarse-grained, heavy, and durable in contact with water and soil.
Each scale covers two seeds, wingless, about the size of honey locust seeds, oily, sweet, nutritious and of delicious flavor.
Nests are of wood chips in cavities excavated about 20 feet high in willow, honey locust, ash, apple, and pear.
Nests are of wood chips in cavities excavated about 13 feet high in elm, honey locust, and ash.
The leaf stems are long and flexible, and the whole tree top is as light and feathery and tremulous in a breeze as that of a honey locust or a willow.
Sometimes a honey locust has a crowded group of these thorns growing out of the trunk and large limbs.
Blackberry, honey locust, osage orange, and prickly ash formed in places thorny tangles almost impenetrable to humans.
July 24: Bundles of green leaves of osage orange and carrion-flower; many pods of honey locust.
Nevertheless, honey locust is used relatively little as compared with osage orange.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "honey locust" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.