A large tree was in advance, round whose stem the thorns did not press quite so pertinaciously as elsewhere.
The beam d, is about sixteen feet in length, and six inches in thickness, being cut out from a large tree that is divided by a fork into two arms.
I have been all the time waiting for you to put in my large tree.
A large treeby the palace marks its site; for, at this distance, the buildings are themselves undistinguishable.
The latter forms a large tree, with very dense foliage, and deep shining green leaves, a foot to eighteen inches long.
By this time Will had steered the vessel to the left bank, running under the overhanging branches of a large tree.
A few miles up Azito caught sight of the little yacht, which on being cast off had drifted for some distance and then run into the bank, where it had wedged itself among the lower boughs of a large tree.
There was a broad open space in front of these, with a large tree standing in the middle.
This species is a large tree in all parts of the State, although the largest specimens are found in the southeastern part of the State.
The species in all of our area grows to be a large tree.
It so happened that I got a shot at a deer that was nearly hidden from sight behind a large tree.
I could get a glimpse of the thing as it would pass between the trees, then it would disappear behind brush or a large tree for a moment, then I would get a glimpse of it as it would move.
The place where the trap was setting was in the head of a small ravine and near the edge of a windfall, just on the lower side of the bait pen, and but a few feet from it lay the partly decayed trunk of a large tree.
The natives have assured me that they mutually assist each other, and that several engage together in the work of overturning a large tree.
Among the best of the wild fruits is one resembling raisins; this grows in clusters upon a large tree.
Charred stumps stood thickly in the clearings, with here and there a large tree girdled by the axe and left to decay.
That night the overseer, with the help of three of the hands, tied me up to a large tree--my arms and legs being clasped round it, and my body drawn up hard against it by two men pulling at my arms and one pushing against my back.
I swam to the other side of the creek, and forced my way through the reeds to a large tree, and stood under one of its lowest limbs, ready in case of necessity, to spring up into it.
A large tree, very common in the fertile bottoms of the western streams.
A large tree, at home in Montana, Idaho, and the Pacific States.
We came to at Grave Creek Fleets, and all went up to see the Great Mound, the apex of which had a depression, with a large tree growing in it having the names and dates of visit of several persons carved on its trunk.
So they settled themselves under a large tree in the garden close to the house and, as it happened, just underneath Mrs. Hartwell-Jones’s window.
The sticks may, on an emergency, be replaced by faggots of brushwood, by guns, or by ropes carried down from the overhanging branches of a large tree.
Although the Yew is a large tree, it is by no means a tall tree: the height of full-grown Yews in this country ranging between fifteen and fifty feet, though they are said to attain a greater length in India.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "large tree" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.