Lexicographical Neighbors of Tooart
Literary usage of Tooart
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Catalogue of the British Colonies by Great Britain (1878)
"Summers, J. One Pair of Wagon Shafts, White Gum or tooart. ... While Gum or tooart
Naves. Red Gum Spokes. Three Pieces of Scantling. York Committee. ..."
2. Austral English: A Dictionary of Australasian Words, Phrases and Usages with by Edward Ellis Morris (1898)
"tooart, or Tewart, n. a West Australian name for Eucalyptus ... 181 : " Another
valuable tree is the tooart, a kind of white gum." 1875. ..."
3. Proceedings of the Society of American Foresters by Society of American Foresters (1912)
"It was not possible to secure a specimen of tooart for the purpose and only very
small 10-year-old trees of Eucalyptus ..."
4. Report by California State Board of Forestry (1888)
"... (tooart gum) plants. Eucalyptus rostra ta (red gum) plants. ... (tooart),
transplanted 50 cts. 4 00 Eucalyptus obliqua, transplanted 50 cts. ..."
5. Journal by Royal Society of Arts (Great Britain) (1873)
"... where they have d. a large store of jarrah and tooart wood. t wood is a species
of white gum, and has a grain, is extremely hard, cannot be split, ..."
6. Cyclopedia of American Horticulture: Comprising Suggestions for Cultivation by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Wilhelm Miller (1900)
"tooart TREE. Tree, 120 ft. or leas high: bark persistent, rough but not stringy,
rather dark on old trunks, smooth and grayish on younger trees and ..."
7. Select Extra-tropical Plants, Readily Eligible for Industrial Culture Or by Ferdinand von Mueller (1888)
"The tooart of South-Western Australia; attains a height of 120 feet, the clear
trunk a length of 50 feet. The wood is tough, heavy and rigid, ..."