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Crossword clues for winterberry

Wiktionary
winterberry

n. 1 A species of holly native to the United States and Canada and producing red berry, ''Ilex verticillata''. 2 The fruit of this plant.

WordNet
winterberry

n. deciduous shrub of southeastern and central United States [syn: bearberry, possum haw, Ilex decidua]

Usage examples of "winterberry".

There, waiting patiently on the grassdrive at the bottom of the steps, was Winterberry, mounted on the most beautiful stridebeast Mitchella had ever seen, hardly shaggy at all, and it appeared fast.

Flair, it was obvious to Straif that Winterberry tracked almost as well as he did himself.

Straif had harvested three grychomp teeth as mementos and given one each to Winterberry and Antenn.

He leaned left, then right, and stabbed the barbed tip straight through the winterberry with a pop of purple juice.

I touched the winterberry hollies which were very special to me because I could always see their bright red berries from my window, even during the cold cold winters.

I stood by my bed, trying to get up the nerve to sneak into the pantry for a huge bolt of bourbon followed by a whole pack of Winterberry or Chinaberry chewing gum, when Jonathan came in.

Maine what is called holly is the winterberry, a deciduous shrub that botanists rank as a species of alder.

As Winterberry walked slowly to Ailim, Bucus towered over the table, waving his gavel at her.

Up in the middle of the night to tend to the cows, then trudging through the winterberry to throw the milk away in order to claim the serpent was feeding in our field again.

Jamie was in the winterberry, thinking about deer, singing softly to himself, when he heard it.

I thought that if I waited long enough she would certainly show upshe would come back like the winterberry, bright and strong even in the cold cold winter.

Her people had been days without anything beyond winterberries picked in haste and water drunk by the handful, whether fresh or stagnant.

A day and half of winterberries and pine nuts left his stomach aching for something more substantial.

Then with that he began to put wreaths of the orange and red winterberries and sprays of wych hazel and bits of exquisite ivy, one after the other, into her hands.

Her people had been days without anything beyond winterberries picked in haste and water drunk by the handful, whether fresh or stagnant.