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Examples
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The first four miles was over a beautiful grassy plain, with mulga wood, not very thick; it then became more sandy, and covered with gum, cork-trees, and other scrubs, which continued within a mile of where we camped, in a small, but beautiful grassed plain; no water.
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For the first three miles our course was through a very thick mulga scrub, with plenty of grass, and occasionally a little spinifex; it then changed to a slightly undulating country of a reddish soil, with gum and cork-trees, and numerous low sandy plains, much resembling the gum and spinifex plains to the west, where I was twice beaten back.
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The cork-trees hoar that clothe the shaggy steep,
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That was a Spain of cork-trees, of groves by the green margins of mountain brooks, of habitable hills, where shepherds might feed their flocks and mad lovers and maids forlorn might wander and maunder; and here were fields of corn and apple orchards and vineyards reddening and yellowing up to the doors of those comfortable farmhouses, with nowhere the sign of a Christian cavalier or a turbaned infidel.
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In the environs, cotton is cultivated, and charcoal is made from the Araish forest of cork-trees.
Travels in Morocco 2003
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The novel beauty of the Dabney gardens can scarcely be exaggerated; each step was a new incursion into the tropics, -- a palm, a magnolia, a camphor-tree, a dragon-tree, suggesting Humboldt and Orotava, a clump of bamboos or cork-trees, or the startling strangeness of the great grass-like banana, itself a jungle.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 37, November, 1860 Various
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Some of the cork-trees were fine specimens, of great age.
Rambles in the Islands of Corsica and Sardinia with Notices of their History, Antiquities, and Present Condition. Thomas Forester
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Then the whole party slowly disappeared in the distance, under the groves of cork-trees or up the mountain paths.
Spanish Life in Town and Country L. Higgin
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At the narrow passage between the mountains, there stood in ancient times a grove of cork-trees, called 'Pelagus,' the sea.
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On horseback, he traversed a virgin forest, obliged to bend over his horse's neck to avoid the huge branches of holm-oaks and cork-trees, and laurels and heather that were thirty feet high.
Balzac Frederick Lawton
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