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brushy

[ US /ˈbɹəʃi/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈʌʃi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. covered with or consisting of bushes or thickets
    brushy undergrowth
    `bosky' is a literary term
    a bosky park leading to a modest yet majestic plaza

How To Use brushy In A Sentence

  • In my childhood our neighborhood was largely undeveloped so I know about that freedom to roam, to build brushy forts, and to be the hero in all the adventures your imagination can conjure.
  • A weedy ditch, brushy draw, overgrown fencerow, saddle, or line of dark timber are all good bets. Bag More Big Bucks By Finding the Dominant Doe
  • Brushy species from adjacent dry uplands occur at the margins, such as honey mesquite, huisache, blackbrush, and lotebush, with some grasses such as multiflowered false rhodesgrass, sacaton, cottontop, and plains bristlegrass. Ecoregions of Texas (EPA)
  • North American grass with slender brushy panicles; often a weed on cultivated land.
  • I hunt in some pretty rough terrain covering brushy timbered out lots with Honeysuckle thickets and rocky hillsides. Deer hunting shotgun?
  • The answer, he was to find, lay not in the brushy fields - overgrown with multiflora rose, dogwood saplings, and autumn olive - where both species lived but in the differing ways the two rabbit species saw the landscape.
  • It is a branchy, brushy, rooty tree, without leaves.
  • To the right of the grandstand crowning a little brushy hill sat the fenced-in concrete pavilion, the spot for that evening's dance.
  • All four men were members of "The Eight," who painted scenes of urban life in the unidealized, brushy style that became known as the Ashcan School, which Whitney championed. Gertrude Whitney's Gambit
  • From where I'm sitting right now I can see a brushy patch about 125 yards off across the road, the last remaining outpost of a prominent Big City family's ranch.
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