|
COPSE |
Thicket |
|
BUSH |
Thicket |
|
COPPICE |
Dense thicket |
|
WARDER |
Thicket of sprouting branches |
|
|
CANEBRAKE |
A thicket of canes. |
|
BOSK |
A thicket; a small wood. |
|
THICK |
A thicket; as, gloomy thicks. |
|
CLUMP |
A cluster; a group; a thicket. |
|
|
QUEACH |
A thick, bushy plot; a thicket. |
|
BUSHMENT |
A thicket; a cluster of bushes. |
|
CHAPARRAL |
A thicket of low evergreen oaks. |
|
SHAW |
A thicket; a small wood or grove. |
|
BOSHVARK |
The bush hog. See under Bush, a thicket. |
|
EMBUSH |
To place or hide in a thicket; to ambush. |
|
BRUSHWOOD |
Brush; a thicket or coppice of small trees and shrubs. |
|
SPINNY |
A small thicket or grove with undergrowth; a clump of
trees. |
|
BOSCAGE |
A growth of trees or shrubs; underwood; a thicket; thick
foliage; a wooded landscape. |
|
BRAKE |
A thicket; a place overgrown with shrubs and brambles, with
undergrowth and ferns, or with canes. |
|
BRUSH |
A thicket of shrubs or small trees; the shrubs and small
trees in a wood; underbrush. |
|
BOSQUET |
A grove; a thicket; shrubbery; an inclosure formed by
branches of trees, regularly or irregularly disposed. |
|
DART |
To start and run with velocity; to shoot rapidly along;
as, the deer darted from the thicket. |
|
EMBOSS |
To hide or conceal in a thicket; to imbosk; to inclose,
shelter, or shroud in a wood. |
|
THICKET |
A wood or a collection of trees, shrubs, etc., closely
set; as, a ram caught in a thicket. |
|
SCRUB |
A thicket or jungle, often specified by the name of the
prevailing plant; as, oak scrub, palmetto scrub, etc. |
|
THROUGH |
Among or in the midst of; -- used to denote passage;
as, a fish swims through the water; the light glimmers through a
thicket. |