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brambly

[ UK /bɹˈæmbli/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. covered with brambles and ferns and other undergrowth

How To Use brambly In A Sentence

  • Pointer-type breeds were partially docked for motility; some spaniels because brambly debris was too difficult to clean from the plumey fur.
  • The family home was a large, ramshackle house with an untended and brambly garden.
  • A term like "brambly," is an example of wine dialect that may have the most meaning among wine writers of British descent who have tried to pick blackberries in hedgerows and found that the only ones the birds hadn't eaten already were under-ripe and a little woody in flavor. Archive 2008-01-01
  • B was a bit dubious about climbing along the brambly paths to the top of the mound, but quite enjoyed running back down the side to the field below. Dental development
  • Just beyond the tree line, dozens of rusted barrels poke through brambly undergrowth. Appleseed Project teaches marksmanship and history, hopes to improve the country
  • He had long, flowing green hair and a long, brambly beard, wore a tight tunic, and had a mantle that was sewn with the finest white ermine fur.
  • The Blunt family home was a large, ramshackle house with an untended and brambly garden.
  • The current releases of the Maison Shaps et Roucher-Sarrazin wines feature an effusive, brambly Pinot Noir de Bourgogne 2008 ($19) that should fly off retail shelves and be prominent on by-the-glass wine lists. Wine: Michael Shaps, a Virginia-Burgundy blend
  • It became even more interesting when people started to question the use of the term "brambly" in describing wine and labeled it "jargon. Archive 2008-01-01
  • He motions across the brambly yard to the aqua-blue tank that looms like a spindly-legged giant or a flying saucer just readying for flight. The Angels and Jo-Jo Mason « A Fly in Amber
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