Wood in its appearance, quality, and uses similar to white cedar.
It is a common saying, which probably applies in certain localities only, that a thousand feet of white cedar must be sawed to get one hundred feet of good lumber.
Coopers were among the early users of white cedar.
Here, as everywhere, the principal timber, and that most cut and valued, are the Douglas fir and the white cedar.
Canoe and the whole Securely lashed with a long Cord usially made of the bark of the arbar vita or white Cedar.
White cedar wood is durable, plentiful, and employed in exposed positions as ties and shingles.
White Cedar is best defined as all cedar that is not "red cedar," [p168] and is obtained from several valuable trees.
If split properly, ribs of white cedar could be bent and set in shape by the use of hot water.
These are shaped in the form of an elongate-oval from a wide splint of white cedar about 4 inches wide at midlength and ¼ inch thick.
Two thin strips about 19 feet long are next split out of white cedar to form the gunwale caps; these are ¼ to ⅜ inch thick, and taper each way from about 2 inches wide in the middle to 1 inch wide at the ends.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "white cedar" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.