Definition of Tuart

1. a eucalyptus [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Tuart

tsutsumu
tsutsumus
tsuyuharai
tszoris
tszuj
tszujed
tszujes
tszujing
tteok
tteoks
tu-whit tu-whoo
tu quoque
tuaminoheptane
tuan
tuans
tuart (current term)
tuarts
tuatara
tuataras
tuatera
tuateras
tuath
tuaths
tub
tub-cart
tub-thumper
tub chair
tub gurnard
tub of guts
tub of lard

Literary usage of Tuart

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

1. The Principal Species of Wood: Their Characteristic Properties by Charles Henry Snow (1908)
"tuart is one of the strongest of all woods. Representative Uses of Wood. •Keels, buffers, stern-posts, frames, wheel-hubs, shafts. ..."

2. New Zealand Forestry by David Ernest Hutchins (1919)
"The tuart forests are small, nearly all private, and confined to a narrow ... tuart should flourish, and be perhaps the most valuable production of the soil ..."

3. Western Australian Timber Tests, 1906 by G. A. Julius (1908)
"Section through Bolt Holes in tuart and Teak bogie bolsters. Plate 31.—Section through tuart and American Oak bogie bolster. Plate 32. ..."

4. The Aborigines of Victoria: With Notes Relating to the Habits of the Natives by Robert Brough Smyth (1878)
"tuart, an old black, was lying comfortably asleep one night in the encampment on the south ... an evil spirit has entered tuart." Blazing fires were made, ..."

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