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well-wooded

adjective

  1. having abundant trees, shrubs, grasses, etc

    a well-wooded escarpment

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Example Sentences

A member of the weasel family, pine marten prefer well-wooded areas with plenty of cover and largely feed on small rodents, birds, insects and fruit.

From BBC

Among Scottish glens, Feshie is unusual for being both broad and well-wooded, and the obvious option now is to walk up the glen and explore the old pinewoods by the river.

Fitting the bill was an Arca-dian 20-acre spread in New York’s Hudson River Valley, with well-wooded grounds that have been enhanced by an opulent boxwood parterre foaming with white hydrangeas and a Monticello-style kitchen garden where tomatoes and zucchini flourish in raised beds.

Our building was a five-story professional office, trapezoidal, contemporary, with smoked windows and a blush-red granite facade, the structure nestled in among other office buildings in a large, well-wooded corporate park in Purchase, New York, fifteen or so miles north of the city.

Outside the harbour of the country, neither very near it nor very far from it, there is a small well-wooded isle . . . it remains unploughed and unsown perpetually, empty of men, only a home for bleating goats.

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