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Perhaps unable to give bird sanctuary praise, farm shut up
Answer for the clue "Perhaps unable to give bird sanctuary praise, farm shut up ", 10 letters:
branchless
Word definitions for branchless in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. having no branches [ant: branchy ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Branchless \Branch"less\, a. Destitute of branches or shoots; without any valuable product; barren; naked.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. Without branches, continuing in a single path or piece. Without divergence.
Usage examples of branchless.
And yet suddenly there it was in his hand, wet and coarse and strong, and when they caught hold of the branchless trunk of a hundred-year-old oak that stood in back of the hotel, he was able to tie Madge on.
And nought but gnarled roots of ancient pines Branchless and blasted, clenched with grasping roots The unwilling soil.
A mile and a half from town, I came to a grove of tall cocoanut trees, with clean, branchless stems reaching straight up sixty or seventy feet and topped with a spray of green foliage sheltering clusters of cocoanuts--not more picturesque than a forest of collossal ragged parasols, with bunches of magnified grapes under them, would be.
All around us the Hundred Trees rose, branchless pillars so immense that four men, hands joined, could not have circled one with their arms.
The question was wrung from Jaikie, a specialist in such matters, as he regarded the branchless bole and the considerable elevation of the bough on which she sat.
Leaving the nearly branchless trunk for somebody else to roll in, Catalan took aim at the next ballyhoo and brought it down too.
The roof at the far end contained a hole below which in a minute courtyard there grew two laurel trees, very slender and branchless until they poked out of the hole to drink up a little sun.
Small, young trees or numerous tall, branchless trees seemed to produce the most obstacles for them.
The trees were giants, rising branchless to far above their heads, the trunks aglow with moss.
Its trunk, branchless for sixty feet, was too thick to climb, but he found a younger and slimmer tree, up which he could squirm and from its upper branches traverse to the other.
Instead of smooth, almost branchless trunks, they had rough, hairy bark and thick, flattened branches that shoved out from the main trunk in every direction.
Before us opened a hall of considerable size, consisting of three distinct vaults, defined by two rows of pillars, slender shafts resembling tall branchless trees, the capital of each being formed by a branching head like that of the palm.
Wellingtonia of the Yosemite, are really gigantic, attaining a height of 250 feet, their huge stems, the warm red of cedar wood, rising straight and branchless for a third of their height, their diameter from seven to fifteen feet, their shape that of a larch, but with the needles long and dark, and cones a foot long.
A strange, big hut, not such as the villagers usually made but built of the branchless bodies of many trees placed close together.
Not by the vines did I ascend, but by a slender Norway pine, whose stem, being branchless for many feet above the ground, seemed to forbid approach by that means.