¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stringybarks
1. stringybark [n] - See also: stringybark
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stringybarks
Literary usage of Stringybarks
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Forestry Handbook by R. Dalrymple Hay, Joseph Henry Maiden (1917)
"According to Howitt, it is known as " Mountain Stringybark " in Gippsland, a name
to which in this State the other stringybarks have also some claim. ..."
2. The Indian Forester (1902)
"As regards the first three stringybarks, the colour of the timber varies a ...
The stringybarks are useful timbers, the yellow stringybark being the most ..."
3. Botanical Abstracts by Board of Control of Botanical Abstracts (1920)
"... the bulk of which came from the gum (eucalypt) trees, and among the principal
varieties of honey value, the iron- barks, the stringybarks, the boxes, ..."
4. Austral English: A Dictionary of Australasian Words, Phrases and Usages with by Edward Ellis Morris (1898)
"It is also called ' Giant Gum ' and ' White Gum.' In Victoria it is one of the '
Red Gums.' It is one of the New South Wales ' stringybarks,' ..."
5. Austral English: A Dictionary of Australasian Words, Phrases, and Usages by Edward Ellis Morris (1898)
"It is also called 'Giant Gum' and 'White Gum.' In Victoria it is one of the '
Red Gums.' It is one of the New South Wales ' stringybarks,' ..."
6. The Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales by Linnean Society of New South Wales (1901)
"The hark is \ cry curious on account of a rich yellow tinge right through the
texture, not merely yellow in the inner layer as in some of the stringybarks. ..."
7. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1904)
"... from the "stringybarks," the sugar of which is glucose. This kino glucoside
is practically a bark product, occurring in species which do not appear to ..."