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Definition of Quercus incana
1. Noun. Small semi-evergreen shrubby tree of southeastern United States having hairy young branchlets and leaves narrowing to a slender bristly point.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Quercus Incana
Literary usage of Quercus incana
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Civil Engineer and Architect's Journal (1857)
"The same forests also produce walnut, maple, horse chestnut, hazel, several
cedars, and two oaks (quercus incana and quercus ..."
2. A Manual of Dangerous Insects Likely to be Introduced in the United States by United States Bureau of Entomology (1918)
"... India; bark and wood of Quercus incana. ... impressus Janson; India; bores in
Quercus incana. ..."
3. The Indian Forester (1882)
"The species of oak that grow in these forests are, beginning with the lowest,
Quercus annn- lata ascending up to 5000 feet, Quercus incana between 3000 and ..."
4. The Indian Forester (1887)
"may serve to give an idea of the climate of the region of Quercus incana and the
deodar. The meteorological station is 7020 feet high, the mean temperature ..."
5. Punjab Plants: Comprising Botanical and Vernacular Names, and Uses of Most by John Lindsay Stewart (1869)
"... Cydonia vulgaris, 80. ban, of the forest, wild. ban, Quercus incana, 199.
ban baggar, Eriophorum comosum, ..."
6. The Indian Forester (1903)
"Coventry attacking the oak, Quercus incana, about 80 per cent of the seed crop
of the trees round Mussoorie being destroyed in 1909. ..."