The further one goes the better it is, and the better also the river, which at the very end of the woods becomes such a stream as the pleinairistes love, with pollarded trees on either side.
The roads were scantily shaded by pollarded trees—mostly mulberry—from whose branches depended long festoons of vines, linking them together, without a break, for miles.
Many of the trees named, if their tops spread too near the houses, may, with good effect, be pollarded about 10 feet from the ground.
The common Plane is much used on the continent for green shelters; the trees are pollarded at about eight feet high, and the vigorous young growths trained down horizontally to a slight framework.
The trees in this case are standards pollarded at about 8 feet from the ground, the form in which they are generally sent out from the nursery.
The big square lay out silent under the moon, splashed with the shadows of the pollarded poplars, the benches upturned, a tree or two uprooted, and beyond all the black gash knocked in the row of white houses.
The oak trees there [Bradgate] were pollarded after her [Jane’s] execution.
Then again, certain strange[3] stunted oaks are shown, trees which the woodmen pollarded when they heard that the fair girl had been beheaded.
At one point, where pollarded trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback.
These millions of pollarded willows which one sees from the line have a deeper significance than might ever be guessed at: it is they that are keeping out Holland's ancient enemy, the sea.
It consisted as far as eye could stretch of unboundaried, level fields, gridironed by straight, military roads, marked by avenues of pollarded trees, intersecting always at right angles.
Glancing through the misty panes, he espied no signs of life--only bare fields, pollarded trees like gallows, and the sullen profiles of shrouded houses.
There, just in front of her was the pollarded acacia, behind which the murderer had cowered for an hour--on the watch.
Two pollarded acacias are planted near the door of the inn, above the lintel of which a painted board scribbled over with irregular lettering invites the traveller to enter.
It is the Crack willow and the White willow, with long slender leaves, that are commonly pollardedas osiers, though they will grow tall enough if they are allowed to.
Our path lay through much pollarded forest, troublesome to walk in, as the stumps send out leafy shoots.
Over same flat pollarded forest until we reached the Kalongwesé Kiver on the right bank, and about a quarter of a mile east of the confluence of the Luéna or Kisaka.
The country is now level, covered with trees pollarded for clothing, and to make ashes of for manure.
The very rivers have been straightened and embanked; the rows of pollarded willows have been planted; they may, when in flood, overflow, but the results are very soon no longer visible.
It was raining hard now, and the wind hummed drearily through the pollarded trees.
It was an old house set far back from the high road and reached by a long drive between pollarded acacias.
Perhaps the most exciting catch of all happened, close to the shutting in of a September dusk, in the avenue of pollarded acacias.
The thick turf, shaven and level, runs to the foot of mossy brick walls; an avenue of pollarded elms leads from the south door; all round stand little, old red houses.
The centre street of the village, near the church, is quaintly arched by a pair of elm trees, cropped and pollarded to meet overhead.
But the main features were single oak-trees with pollarded tops and gnarled branches, which stood about all over these lofty slopes, and gave them a melancholy and dilapidated aspect.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pollarded" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.