30 adverbs to describe how to branched

No one would take it at first sight to be a conifer of any kind, it is so loose in habit and so widely branched, and its foliage is so thin and gray.

A densely-branched, spiny shrub, with small leaves, and not very showy, yellowish-green flowers.

"He hath laid my vine waste, and barked my fig-tree; he hath made it clean bare, and cast it away; the branches thereof are made white.... "Be ye ashamed, O ye husbandmen!

On through the village they swept, past Brumhill Lane-end, thence over the crest where the road branches south to Devizes, and down the last slope.

Wide-branching fig-trees deck the fields Or round the quarries cling, And cactus-stalks, with thorny shields, In wild contortions spring.

The Gothic cathedral, with its clustered columns branching and forming pointed arches overhead, was probably suggested by a grove of trees with overarching branches and boughs.

Colour brown, loosely branched and several inches high.

The burrow has an easy incline for about two feet, then descends perpendicularly for five or six, and after that branches off obliquely; it is often as large as a foot in diameter.

The branches outside tapped the narrow, small paned window near him, and from the open windows below the sweet beauty of the summer morning stole in.

To follow the Food of the Gods further is to trace the ramifications of a perpetually branching tree; in a little while, in the quarter of a lifetime, the Food had trickled and increased from its first spring in the little farm near Hickleybrow until it had spread,it and the report and shadow of its power,throughout the world.

Old specimens, bearing cones about as big as pineapples, may sometimes be found clinging to rifted rocks at an elevation of seven or eight thousand feet, whose highest branches scarce reach above one's shoulders.

Overhead are trees of moderate size, whose general character is constituted by a nearly straight stem, seldom branching except near the top, and furnished with glossy dark-green leaves.

These two lines severally branch off.

Polypidom five or six inches high, rising with a strong, tapering, longitudinally grooved stem, which is sometimes sparingly branched, but more commonly simple.

Of course, the bulk, the massive trunk and the impressive foliage of his business, must come afterwards; but the tree must have been firmly rooted and stoutly branched before then, and able to go on growing on its own account.

One of the thick-branching trees haunted by demons.

A twiggy-branched shrub growing 4 feet or 5 feet high, with oval, Plum-like leaves, and white flowers.

Through clouds of tawny smoke scarcely distinguishable from flame, so thickly were they charged with sparks and fire-flakes, they beheld a line of fire spreading along Cheapside and Cornhill, as far as the Royal Exchange, which was now in flames, and branching upwards in another line through Lawrence-lane to Guildhall, which was likewise burning.

Early in the afternoon of that day I took a book, and, going down the road some distance, climbed up a broad-branched willow-tree to wait for him.

Couch. Branched dichotomously; branches short, incrassated, truncate.

The specimen had the anterior part of the fin frayed a little, so that it is probable that the soft rays are higher and less distinctly branched than the artist has represented them to be in copying the example placed before him.

Forms an elegantly branched bush about two inches high.

Forms small, irregularly branched bushes, four to six inches high and wide.

In the interior of these lenses we distinguish very fine lines radiating from the center and afterward branching several times.

A fine species, growing in loosely-branched phytoid fronds, to a height of several inches.

30 adverbs to describe how to  branched  - Adverbs for  branched