¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Jarrahs
1. jarrah [n] - See also: jarrah
Lexicographical Neighbors of Jarrahs
Literary usage of Jarrahs
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Collection of Treaties, Engagements, and Sunnuds, Relating to India and by India Foreign and Political Dept (1864)
"... the Ranee, will allow all merchants or vnn- !i/ JIi 1I \ viv jarrahs free
liberty to pass and re-pass her territories, to and from the English factory ..."
2. Beverages, Past and Present: An Historical Sketch of Their Production by Edward Randolph Emerson (1908)
"... and are generally placed in a tray of tinned copper, which receives the water
that exudes from them. In cold weather china bottles called jarrahs and ..."
3. Beverages, Past and Present: An Historical Sketch of Their Production by Edward Randolph Emerson (1908)
"... and are generally placed in a tray of tinned copper, which receives the water
that exudes from them. In cold weather china bottles called jarrahs and ..."
4. The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Miscellany (1823)
"... from the large society in which they mix, more dissipated. There are, besides
the cultivators and citizens, a considerable body of Bin- jarrahs and ..."
5. The Forests of Western Australia and Their Development, with Plan and by Western Australia Woods and Forests Dept, J. Ednie-Brown (1899)
"The tree is always found amongst the banksias and jarrahs growing on the flats
lying between the hills and sea coast. NOTE.—Besides the foregoing, there are ..."
6. Journal of Forestry and Estates Management (1882)
"A few of the jarrahs here have attained the respectable size of about 6 ft.
in height, and the sugar and Tasmanian gums have now attained an average height ..."
7. Rajputana District Gazetteers by Rajputana (Agency). (1904)
"In diseases requiring surgical interference, however, the dispensaries are more
frequently resorted to, though jarrahs (native barber surgeons) and ..."