¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Shrublike
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Shrublike
Literary usage of Shrublike
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Field Book of American Trees and Shrubs: A Concise Description of the by Ferdinand Schuyler Mathews (1915)
"In Me. it is somewhat rare and shrublike; in NH it is rare, only frequent in the
southeastern section, and quite absent in the White Mt. district (except in ..."
2. Outlines of Botany for the High School Laboratory and Classroom by Robert Greenleaf Leavitt, Charles Herbert Clark, Mrs. Sophia M'Ilvaine (Bledsoe) Herrick, Asa Gray (1901)
"The Poison Ivy is a woody vine, sometimes assuming a partially erect, shrublike
habit. Wherever, in clambering over the rocks, the stem finds shade and ..."
3. The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research by American Society for Psychical Research (1914)
"This picture was of a wide, undulating country, covered with low shrublike trees
and bushes in which soldiers were taking cover. ..."
4. The Horticulturist, and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste by Luther Tucker (1866)
"These were quite small and shrublike, and cut out into various shapes. Some were
pyramidical, some round, some oval, some curved in from a broad base ..."
5. Field Book of American Trees and Shrubs: A Concise Description of the by Ferdinand Schuyler Mathews (1915)
"In Me. it is somewhat rare and shrublike; in NH it is rare, only frequent in the
southeastern section, and quite absent in the White Mt. district (except in ..."
6. Outlines of Botany for the High School Laboratory and Classroom by Robert Greenleaf Leavitt, Charles Herbert Clark, Mrs. Sophia M'Ilvaine (Bledsoe) Herrick, Asa Gray (1901)
"The Poison Ivy is a woody vine, sometimes assuming a partially erect, shrublike
habit. Wherever, in clambering over the rocks, the stem finds shade and ..."
7. The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research by American Society for Psychical Research (1914)
"This picture was of a wide, undulating country, covered with low shrublike trees
and bushes in which soldiers were taking cover. ..."
8. The Horticulturist, and Journal of Rural Art and Rural Taste by Luther Tucker (1866)
"These were quite small and shrublike, and cut out into various shapes. Some were
pyramidical, some round, some oval, some curved in from a broad base ..."