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Example sentences for "tall trees"

  • The birds were found to spend considerable time in tall trees; the closest that I saw them to the ground was when they were feeding only three to four feet from the ground in the ink berry bushes.

  • Nests were observed in tall trees, many of which were well isolated from other trees and vegetation.

  • Of sticks and weeds in the tops of tall trees; eggs bluish white, usually unmarked, but occasionally with a few brownish specks (1.

  • Of sticks lined with weeds and bark, in tall trees; eggs white, unmarked.

  • Of sticks, weeds, leaves and trash high up in tall trees; eggs white, spotted with blackish-brown.

  • A platform of sticks in tall trees in wet woods.

  • Tall trees he crushed or hurled aside, And every bird was terrified.

  • The cries of startled birds, the sound Of tall trees crashing to the ground, Struck with amaze each giant’s ear, And filled the isle with sudden fear.

  • Even the gorge is in gloom--like the valley below, shadowed by tall trees.

  • Her game was not there to be found; but under the shadow of tall trees that, keeping the curve of the river, formed a semicircular grove between it and the garden.

  • There was a house in sight surrounded by tall trees.

  • The nest is placed in the upper branches of tall trees, 2-3 eggs heavily marked with brown being laid in Florida in April; in Iowa in June.

  • Eagles nest in tall trees and on cliffs, and lay two or three dull white eggs, in Florida, in November and December; in Maine, in April.

  • The bird usually sings from the upper branches of tall trees, often cypresses, in Florida, but further north, from pines, where he can be far more easily heard than seen.

  • Herons build their nests in the upper branches of tall trees, making them of sticks and twigs, lined with grass and roots.

  • And as they roost in great numbers on the branches of tall trees, every bat being suspended by its hinder feet, with its wings wrapped round his body, they look from a little distance just like bunches of fruit.

  • They nest in the top of tall trees, laying two or three greenish white, unmarked eggs; size 1.

  • They nest in tall trees, generally in deserted Woodpeckers' holes, laying three or four white eggs during May; size about 1.

  • Their nests are massive structures of sticks, in the tops of tall trees.

  • They build their nests of sticks and weeds well up in tall trees.

  • It builds usually pretty high up in tall trees, in some fork not quite at the outside, constructing a broad shallow cup, and lays normally four eggs, although I have found five.

  • On the opposite shore are forests of tall trees, bright in the new verdure of the season.

  • In spring the species frequented the upper half of large trees and was more numerous in tall trees of woodlands than it was in smaller groups or rows of tall trees.

  • Singing perches on dead limbs that were rather exposed were the rule, but they were not often as high as the tops of tall trees.

  • Before them they saw a grove of tall trees, towards which the pallahs were directing their course.

  • Nothing was to be seen on either hand but wild mountain-sides and arid plains dotted here and there with gigantic ant-hills and occasional groves of tall trees.

  • Its nest is generally placed on tall trees, or the clefts and chasms of rocks and hill sides.

  • The nest of the Jay is commonly built in a high coppice wood, or hedge, generally many feet from the ground, although it is seldom seen near the tops of tall trees, like those of the Magpie and Crow.

  • Their building-places are cliffs and precipices, church towers, caves and rocky fissures, and the clefts between the forked branches of tall trees.

  • In some sections of the country these birds are said to nest in low bushes, but we have invariably found them in tall trees, at heights varying from fifty to sixty feet.

  • Like most of its family, this species places the nest high up in tall trees, although instances have occurred where they were not more than twenty feet from the ground.

  • Like all of its peculiar and characteristic genus, this species affects a fondness for forests, or the summits of tall trees, but seldom ventures upon the ground.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tall trees" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    anterior part; chocolate cake; feet below the surface; glacial deposits; good flavor; holy place; land will; legal authority; more appropriate; much wealth; only twenty; passive resistance; philosophical works; queer smile; seizing the; tall and; tall fellow; tall figure; tall man; tall stature; tall tree; tall trees; then looked; tropical fruits; under such; will support