Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Wood used for flooring ", 4 letters:
teak

Alternative clues for the word teak

Usage examples of teak.

All this great ever-increasing flood of bronze, brass, chrome, Fiberglas, lapstreak, teak, auto pilots, burgees, Power Squadron hats, nylon line, all this chugging winking blundering glitter of props, bilge pumps and self-importance needs dockside space.

Faulkner swore, lit another cigarillo, and watched the man who sat opposite her broad teak desk.

When the immense teak tub was full of water, perfumed with miada grass and sweetened with gomuti sugar, we both stripped off our silks and got into it together.

Janine repeated, running her fingers over the varnished teak joinery, and then bouncing experimentally on the couches.

In the right-hand corner, almost invisible from outside, was a narrow door of thick teak that opened very readily when the Mahatma fumbled with it although I saw no lock, hasp or keyhole on the side toward us.

The Sunhoose fire wi the wee twirly bits in the veneered teak surrounds has seen better days.

Swearing, Breezy jerked her hand up to her face and Cori dove, her weight knocking Breezy backward and sending the gun across the polished teak floor, landing in the fringe of the oriental carpet.

Outside some one was pulling the punkah rope, and the great leaves of linen, attached to heavy teak poles, swayed back and forth over his head, stirring slightly the dense, humid atmosphere.

His body was matte-black except where the dusty gray of scars seamed it, a gaunt thing of massive bones and muscles shrunken and knotted and still powerful enough to crack teak beams.

There were camphor trees and teaks and African cedars and red stinkwood trees, and here and there a dark green cloud of leaves mushroomed above the forest canopy.

It was a small, uncolonized comet, carrying a lumbered first growth of some seventy gigatons of oak, teak, and mahogany hybrids.

The Sunhoose fire wi the wee twirly bits in the veneered teak surrounds has seen better days.

As he approached, he could see it was an antique fireboat, built of rich brown wood, mahogany or teak.

The small local industry had made full use of the waste products of the mines at Mont Royal, and many of the teak and ivory carvings were decorated with fragments of calcite and fluorspar picked from the refuse heaps, ingeniously worked into the statuettes to form miniature crowns and necklaces.

He learned the tensile strength of the local teak or cedar with near-native fluency, jackfruit disaster notwithstanding.