scrubland

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of scrubland New Jersey Pine Barrens The New Jersey Pine Barrens, a large, beautiful national reserve in the southern part of the state, is a unique ecosystem composed of forests, scrubland and waterways. Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY, 26 Jan. 2025 The first of two drones lifts off over the brown scrubland. Bymeredith Wadman, science.org, 16 Jan. 2025 Generally, the rich networks of plant life on Earth — from California’s coastal scrublands and marshes to the Amazon rainforest to the Sahara Desert — sequester carbon away from the atmosphere in their limbs, trunks and leaves. Noah Haggerty, Los Angeles Times, 28 Jan. 2025 The multiple wildfires that have ravaged the state, have destroyed tens of thousands of acres of trees and scrubland, as well as people's homes. Hannah Parry, Newsweek, 27 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for scrubland
Recent Examples of Synonyms for scrubland
Noun
  • Over the subsequent decades, Earth Day has spread around the globe as more and more countries call for environmental regulations to protect the planet’s air, water, forests and wildlife from industrial pollution and greenhouse gases that are harming our climate.
    Andrew Torgan, CNN Money, 20 Apr. 2025
  • In Singapore, entire skyscrapers are now wrapped in vertical forests, a concept pioneered by architect Stefano Boeri.
    Ximena Araya-Fischel, Forbes.com, 19 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • Wildfires are part of the life cycle of forests and the chaparral, which burn with regularity to regenerate themselves and have occurred long before humans populated the Golden State.
    Hugo A Loaiciga, San Diego Union-Tribune, 25 Mar. 2025
  • Within a few hours, what started as a small fire in the chaparral quickly spread to homes built at the edge of the wildlands, many of them big, expensive homes with nice views that had been built by people who wanted to be close to nature or wanted some buffer from the chaos of urban life.
    Jeff Goodell, Rolling Stone, 13 Feb. 2025
Noun
  • Patent thickets are when manufacturers file multiple patents on one product to forestall generic competition.
    Victoria Knight, Axios, 3 Apr. 2025
  • In the early days of graphic methods in statistics and the sciences, charts and graphs were meant to be efficient, clearing a thicket of abundant information in the heyday of print.
    Mara Mills, Artforum, 1 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • The eyes in the sky gazed down on a copse of spindly trees in western Russia, hooking onto where North Korean forces were coalescing, a Ukrainian special operations forces commander, who is being identified only by his call sign, Green, told Newsweek.
    Thomas G. Moukawsher, Newsweek, 23 Mar. 2025
  • Below us were hayfields and stone barns, copses and creeks.
    Nick Paumgarten, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025
Noun
  • During one expedition to what was once London, a young scientist, out gathering brushwood, unearths a small vacuum flask, inside which is a handwritten account of life in a small village called Beadle during the days leading up to the lunar catastrophe.
    Michael Dirda, Washington Post, 2 Feb. 2023
  • Bare dunes were planted with ‘brushwood and windbreaks, perpendicular to wind direction’ so that the dunes do not interfere with the canal system and irrigated farmlands.
    Azera Parveen Rahman, Quartz, 27 Oct. 2022
Noun
  • Old pine groves dotted the valley and the surrounding ridgetops.
    Thomas Weddle, Outdoor Life, 17 Apr. 2025
  • To distract me from the bombs exploding around us, my grandfather described his former home and olive groves in what is now Israel, which he had been forced to flee in 1948.
    Raja Krishnamoorthi, MSNBC Newsweek, 9 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • The woodlands are hilly, with numerous ditches and draws that run into croplands.
    Jeffrey A. Brunk, Outdoor Life, 10 Apr. 2025
  • The pinyon jay — a signature species of Colorado's pinyon-juniper woodlands — has lost 70% of its population.
    Alayna Alvarez, Axios, 31 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • The two most straightforward of the trials will involve large-scale planting of trees and bioenergy crops, including Miscanthus grasses and coppice willow, reports Robert Lea for AZoCleanTech.
    Alex Fox, Smithsonian Magazine, 27 May 2021
  • Another strategy, called short rotation coppice, involves planting fast-growing trees such as willows and poplars in extremely dense rows.
    Eric Toensmeier, Scientific American, 1 Aug. 2020

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Cite this Entry

“Scrubland.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/scrubland. Accessed 24 Apr. 2025.

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