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buffalo grass
noun
- a short grass, Buchloë dactyloides, having gray-green blades, prevalent on the dry plains east of the Rocky Mountains.
- any of several short, tufted grasses that do not form continuous sod.
buffalo grass
noun
- a short grass, Buchloë dactyloides , growing on the dry plains of the central US
- a grass, Stenotaphrum americanum , introduced from North America
Word History and Origins
Origin of buffalo grass1
Example Sentences
We have a buffalo grass lawn that was started with plugs, so I’m writing from experience.
Violence and wanton cruelty are as commonplace as shimmering fields of buffalo grass among the land-grubbing settlers, nefarious opportunists and Indigenous loners who populate the region.
The buffalo grass around Perilee’s house was tall but thick as moss; I had no trouble picking up the tracks of three barefoot children.
Now, we have to confront honestly this fact: the white nationalists in Charlottesville, and every other town, are as native to American soil as sagebrush and buffalo grass.
In an effort to create the natural-looking landscape the homeowners wanted, Lobl removed 1,000 square feet of Bermuda grass and replaced it with buffalo grass developed especially for California’s climate.
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