Definition of Larches

1. Noun. (plural of larch) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Larches

1. larch [n] - See also: larch

Lexicographical Neighbors of Larches

larbish
larboard
larboards
larbs
larcener
larceners
larcenies
larcenist
larcenists
larcenous
larcenously
larceny
larch
larch tree
larchen
larches (current term)
larchlike
lard
lard oil
lardacein
lardaceous
lardaceous liver
lardarse
lardarses
lardball
lardboy

Literary usage of Larches

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Farm Woodlot: A Handbook of Forestry for the Farmer and the Student in by Edward Gheen Cheyney, John Philip Wentling (1914)
"The larches The larches are distinguished from the pines chiefly by their leaves. In summer the foliage is very different, and in the winter the larches are ..."

2. The Tree Book: A Popular Guide to a Knowledge of the Trees of North America by Julia Ellen Rogers (1905)
"Only the terminal shoots bear scattered leaves/ Beside the three North American species there are six Old- World larches—all in the colder latitudes of the ..."

3. The Important Timber Trees of the United States: A Manual of Practical by Simon Bolivar Elliott (1912)
"THE larches THERE are three species of larches (botanically Larix) indigenous to the United States, and two of them are of economic importance. ..."

4. A History of British Forest-trees: Indigenous and Introduced by Prideaux John Selby (1842)
"In Stanwick Park, the seat of Lord Prudhoe in the same county, are three larches measuring respectively, at three feet from the ground, nine feet eleven ..."

5. The MAGAZINE of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and (1856)
"THE AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN larches. BY WILSON FLAC (!. THE larch is a well-known tree, differing from the pines and firs in the deciduous character of its ..."

6. Trees that Every Child Should Know: Easy Tree Studies for All Seasons of the by Julia Ellen Rogers (1909)
"THE larches In the Northern states, and Canada, long stretches of cold marsh land are covered with solid growths of tamarack, our American larch tree. ..."

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