释义 |
Definition of jack pine in English: jack pinenoun A small, hardy North American pine with short needles. 美国短叶松,班克松 Pinus banksiana, family Pinaceae Example sentencesExamples - The forests include such conifers as red spruce, black spruce, white spruce, balsam fir, red pine, jack pine, eastern white pine, tamarack, eastern white cedar, and eastern hemlock.
- The wooded area includes stands of spruce and jack pine, indigenous popular bushes and majestic oak trees and provides scenic walking and horse riding trails as well as wildlife habitat.
- We were, after all, making our way through a wilderness of black spruce, jack pine and balsam fir that stretched away on either side of the river for a total of 12,000 kilometres, forming a green mantle around the entire Arctic icecap.
- Most of the cones produced by jack pine and lodgepole pine look like miniature hand grenades - and are just about as tough.
- When they are in jack pine, with crooked and very limby trees, there is very little choice but to tackle each stem one at a time.
Definition of jack pine in US English: jack pinenoun A small, hardy North American pine with very short needles, found chiefly in Canada. 美国短叶松,班克松 Pinus banksiana, family Pinaceae Example sentencesExamples - The forests include such conifers as red spruce, black spruce, white spruce, balsam fir, red pine, jack pine, eastern white pine, tamarack, eastern white cedar, and eastern hemlock.
- Most of the cones produced by jack pine and lodgepole pine look like miniature hand grenades - and are just about as tough.
- The wooded area includes stands of spruce and jack pine, indigenous popular bushes and majestic oak trees and provides scenic walking and horse riding trails as well as wildlife habitat.
- When they are in jack pine, with crooked and very limby trees, there is very little choice but to tackle each stem one at a time.
- We were, after all, making our way through a wilderness of black spruce, jack pine and balsam fir that stretched away on either side of the river for a total of 12,000 kilometres, forming a green mantle around the entire Arctic icecap.
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