Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
eucalyptus .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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He looked now for gnarled root groupings in the clump grass and eucalypti, for patches of lemongrass, for small, stunted oak trees, for the Japanese had a genius for digging into them, for building small, one-man forts, impregnable to artillery but at the same time inescapable.
A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set Stephen Hunter 2009
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He looked now for gnarled root groupings in the clump grass and eucalypti, for patches of lemongrass, for small, stunted oak trees, for the Japanese had a genius for digging into them, for building small, one-man forts, impregnable to artillery but at the same time inescapable.
A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set Stephen Hunter 2009
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He looked now for gnarled root groupings in the clump grass and eucalypti, for patches of lemongrass, for small, stunted oak trees, for the Japanese had a genius for digging into them, for building small, one-man forts, impregnable to artillery but at the same time inescapable.
A Bob Lee Swagger eBook Boxed Set Stephen Hunter 2009
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The first twelve miles is poor country, being on the top of stony rises, with eucalypti, grass, and scrubs.
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Started at 7 a.m., with Thring and Woodforde, and seven horses, following our tracks through the rotten ground to the first eucalypti, for about twelve miles, as it made it lighter for the horses, the tracks being beaten to that place.
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After the twenty-seven miles we again met with the new small-leafed tree, the broad-leafed mallee, the eucalypti, and many other scrubs.
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We then proceeded over another open part of it, for about two miles, when the dwarf eucalypti again commenced, and continued until we camped at twenty-one miles; the horses quite worn out.
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It is covered with long grass and polygonum; also a few eucalypti scattered over it.
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The country became thickly studded with eucalypti, in one or two places rather open, but generally thick.
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Sturt Plains have been at one time the bed of a large fresh-water lake; our journey of the 6th instant was over the middle of it, and we were not at the end of it when I was forced to return; the same rotten ground and shells continued, although we had got amongst the eucalypti.
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