Lexicographical Neighbors of Bluewood
Literary usage of Bluewood
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Stories of the Kings of Norway Called the Round World (Heimskringla) by Snorri Sturluson (1905)
"... apparently unfairly, that bluewood-heath (mountain ridge running S. and N.
to the east of Thingvellir) should form the dividing boundary of the property ..."
2. The Tree Book: A Popular Guide to a Knowledge of the Trees of North America by Julia Ellen Rogers (1905)
"It is a pretty little tree, clothing its heavy, hard wood with bright red bark.
The purple or black plums are sweet and of pleasant flavour. The bluewood ..."
3. Missionary Review of the World (1898)
"... bluewood, and many hard-wood timbers abound on the hillsides. The only indigenous
animals are rats and probably pigs, (¡oats, cows, horses, dogs, ..."
4. Practical Forestry: A Treatise on the Propagation, Planting, and Cultivation by Andrew Samuel Fuller (1910)
"bluewood, Logwood. A genus of three species, one in South America, and two in
the United States. Small evergreen shrubs, but one, the Con- dalia obovata, ..."