Concept cluster: Tools > Landscapes and habitats
adj
Resembling an appliance
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a basement.
adj
Resembling or reminiscent of a bathroom.
n
Alternative spelling of boscage [A place set with trees or mass of shrubbery, a grove or thicket.]
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a bog.
n
A tree from which the branches have been cut; a pollard.
n
A place set with trees or mass of shrubbery, a grove or thicket.
n
A small grove or copse of trees, a thicket.
n
Alternative spelling of bosket [A small grove or copse of trees, a thicket.]
n
(uncountable) An area of countryside heavily populated by this fern.
n
A thicket, or an area overgrown with briers etc.
n
A place where briars grow.
n
an area mostly covered with brush growth
adj
Resembling, or in the style of, a bunker.
adj
Resembling or reminiscent of a bunker.
adj
Resembling a military bunker
n
(obsolete, dialectal, agriculture) An irrigation system in which a meadow receives water from a spring or stream on the side of a hill.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a cemetery.
n
Archaic spelling of chaparral. [(US) A region of shrubs, typically dry in the summer and rainy in the winter. The coast of the Mediterranean is such a region.]
n
(Louisiana) An area of scrub oak growing in an accumulation of alluvial soil in a stream, creek, bayou, marsh or river.
n
A place or receptacle for depositing the ashes of cremated people.
n
The ground; the earth; a spot of earth or turf.
n
(dated, in place names) A small hill.
v
Obsolete spelling of cupel [To refine by means of a cupel.]
n
A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth and ensure a reliable supply of timber. See copse.
n
Obsolete spelling of coppice [A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth and ensure a reliable supply of timber. See copse.]
n
Obsolete form of copse. [A coppice: an area of woodland managed by coppicing (periodic cutting near stump level).]
n
Alternative form of coppice [A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth and ensure a reliable supply of timber. See copse.]
n
Any thicket of small trees or shrubs, coppiced or not.
n
(agriculture) Silage made from corn (maize): corn silage.
n
An area of forest where harvesting of wood is planned or has taken place.
adj
Alternative form of cupboardlike. [Resembling a cupboard.]
n
A kind of seasonal shallow wetland in parts of Africa.
n
(UK, dialect, uncountable) Sea gravel mixed with sand.
adj
possessing medieval, dungeon-like attributes or atmosphere
n
(archaic) Synonym of silage.
n
A tract of marshland, especially one containing clumps of sawgrass and hammocks of vegetation
n
(forestry) Wood that gives an erroneous impression of being heartwood.
n
A type of wetland fed by ground water and runoff, containing peat below the waterline, characteristically alkaline.
adj
(rare) Resembling or characteristic of a fridge.
n
A type of low scrubland found on limestone soils in southern France and other parts of the Mediterranean Basin.
n
Synonym of dark kitchen
n
(agriculture) A condition in which a person is fully submerged in grain, most often in a silo or other grain storage structure.
n
(obsolete, figuratively) That which is transitory.
n
Obsolete form of greenwood. [A forest in full leaf, as in summer.]
n
A small forest.
n
(Botswana) A type of terrain characterized by rocky outcrops and hard soil.
n
A tract of level uncultivated land with sandy soil and scrubby vegetation; heathland.
n
A tract of scrubland habitats characterised by open, low growing woody vegetation, found on mainly infertile acidic soils. Similar to moorland but with warmer and drier climate.
n
(UK dialectal) A hollow cavity.
n
Rich flat land near a river, prone to being completely flooded; a river-meadow; bottomland.
n
A small piece of woodland or a woody hill; a copse.
n
(obsolete) A wood; copse.
n
(Australia) An imaginary god or higher power responsible for rain.
n
The mixture of seeds, water, fertilizer, etc. used in hydroseeding.
n
(biology) An overgrown agar culture, such that no separation between single colonies exists.
n
A shrubland biota in Mediterranean countries, typically consisting of densely-growing evergreen shrubs.
n
A type of wetland in Patagonia.
n
A seaside marsh, used for agriculture
n
(poetic) A meadow.
n
(obsolete) Meadow.
n
Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea.
n
Open land that has an acidic peaty soil and is mostly covered with heather or bracken.
n
(US, chiefly Texas) A copse or small grove of trees, especially live oak or elm.
n
Alternative spelling of mudflat. [A muddy expanse of flat land, especially such land as a river bed exposed at low tide.]
n
Land with peat soil, such as an active or former bog
adj
(soil science) Characterised by the presence of pegasse; peaty.
adj
quicksandlike
n
(UK, dialectal) A gravestone
adj
having a recess or nook
n
A reef-like quality; danger or difficulty that is hidden or submerged.
adj
containing reefs.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a refrigerator.
n
A little ridge.
n
Land where sedge grows in abundance.
n
Ground prepared for the planting of seeds.
n
The time to sow seeds.
adj
Having a shrubbery.
n
A planting of shrubs; a wide border to a garden where shrubs are thickly planted; or a similar larger area with a path winding through it.
n
(mostly plural) Land that is covered mostly with shrubs.
n
(agriculture) from the shape, a building used for the storage of grain.
n
A vast cold, dry grass-plain.
v
To lay straw around plants to protect them from frost.
n
(US) The animals and birds that inhabit swamps.
n
(obsolete) A quicksand.
n
A pocosin with relatively tall trees (and often a closed canopy), shallow peat, and more soil nutrients.
adj
Resembling or characteristic of a tavern.
n
Something or someone who figuratively grows without control or intention.
n
a semi-enclosed cavity which has naturally formed in the trunk or branch of a tree.
n
A small clump of trees or bushes.
adj
(archaic) Made of turf; covered with turf.
v
(transitive) To plant with turnips.
n
A tuft or clump of green grass or similar verdure, forming a small hillock.
n
The small trees and other plants that clutter the floor of a forest.
n
Synonym of underbrush
n
A low-lying area of grassland that is subject to seasonal flooding.
n
Alternative form of water meadow [A low-lying area of grassland that is subject to seasonal flooding.]
n
An area of saturated soil during the growing season.
n
(agriculture) Silage made from wheat: wheat silage.
n
(soil science) A black meadow soil.
n
Alternative spelling of wood lot [(US) An area of land used for the growing of firewood and timber, often as the wooded portion of a farmstead in contrast with arable and pasture portions.]

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
  Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Compound Your Joy   Threepeat   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Help


Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!

Today's secret word is 8 letters and means "Believable and worthy of trust." Can you find it?