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Definition of lumberjack in English: lumberjack(also lumberman) nounˈlʌmbədʒakˈləmbərˌdʒæk (especially in North America) a person who fells trees, cuts them into logs, or transports them to a sawmill. (尤其北美)伐木工人;原木采运工 Example sentencesExamples - After the vast forests of New England, Pennsylvania, and Ohio had been logged, lumbermen set their sights on Minnesota, home of some of the last large stands of unexploited forest east of the Rockies.
- Farmers and lumbermen settled this valley in the 1870s and '80s, and today the town still feels a world away from sprawling suburbia.
- Both guys come from families of real lumberjacks and they often compete in lumberjack competitions.
- In less than twenty years, he predicted, the apparently ‘inexhaustible’ pine forests of lower Michigan would disappear under the lumberman's axe, and no cry for conservation was likely to have any effect.
- We have two professional lumberjacks competing in many of the events of the Old-Time Lumberjacks.
- With no new forested frontiers available, lumbermen turned to the national forests for logs.
- Were he not clean-shaven with slicked back dark brown hair, and had he been wearing spiked hiking boots, the large man would look like a lumberjack fresh from the forest.
- By looking at how and why reforestation failed, we can better understand the motivations driving the foresters and lumbermen, and begin to understand their conceptions of the forest as a whole.
- During the ensuing two decades, lumbermen went on to clear-cut the majority of the timber in the Smokies.
- There was a lumberjack who was sawing a tree, and the tree fell on his leg.
- Local lumbermen notify him when they discover a log with curly maple effects or if they find a large burl such as the one shown here and in the earlier article.
- This will thoroughly anger the lumberjack, and he will take it out on the tree with his chainsaw.
- The chunks of wood, frequent curves, and low water levels wreaked havoc on canoeists; French-Canadian lumberjacks also cursed the river, as their fresh-cut logs frequently became stranded while floating downstream.
- After the violent clearing of people from the Scottish Highlands to make room for sheep, many Highlanders were forced to migrate to Canada to work as lumberjacks or were recruited into the British army to fight in the new colonies.
- There were a lot of lumberjacks to cut down trees and export them to England.
- The first paintball markers were used by timber cruisers and lumbermen to mark the trees selected for harvesting or cutting.
- It was a natural transfer of skills from home, as was their work as lumberjacks in the forests of northern Wisconsin and Minnesota.
- For many generations, my forefathers have been lumbermen, loggers and mill workers.
- I have about as much finesse when it comes to romance as a lumberjack has when cutting down a tree.
- The lumberman decided to to quit the lumber camp immediately and hit the trail as fast as he could.
Definition of lumberjack in US English: lumberjacknounˈləmbərˌjakˈləmbərˌdʒæk A person who fells trees, cuts them into logs, or transports them to a sawmill. (尤其北美)伐木工人;原木采运工 Also called lumberman Example sentencesExamples - I have about as much finesse when it comes to romance as a lumberjack has when cutting down a tree.
- This will thoroughly anger the lumberjack, and he will take it out on the tree with his chainsaw.
- There were a lot of lumberjacks to cut down trees and export them to England.
- It was a natural transfer of skills from home, as was their work as lumberjacks in the forests of northern Wisconsin and Minnesota.
- The first paintball markers were used by timber cruisers and lumbermen to mark the trees selected for harvesting or cutting.
- The chunks of wood, frequent curves, and low water levels wreaked havoc on canoeists; French-Canadian lumberjacks also cursed the river, as their fresh-cut logs frequently became stranded while floating downstream.
- For many generations, my forefathers have been lumbermen, loggers and mill workers.
- The lumberman decided to to quit the lumber camp immediately and hit the trail as fast as he could.
- By looking at how and why reforestation failed, we can better understand the motivations driving the foresters and lumbermen, and begin to understand their conceptions of the forest as a whole.
- During the ensuing two decades, lumbermen went on to clear-cut the majority of the timber in the Smokies.
- Farmers and lumbermen settled this valley in the 1870s and '80s, and today the town still feels a world away from sprawling suburbia.
- We have two professional lumberjacks competing in many of the events of the Old-Time Lumberjacks.
- In less than twenty years, he predicted, the apparently ‘inexhaustible’ pine forests of lower Michigan would disappear under the lumberman's axe, and no cry for conservation was likely to have any effect.
- With no new forested frontiers available, lumbermen turned to the national forests for logs.
- Both guys come from families of real lumberjacks and they often compete in lumberjack competitions.
- Local lumbermen notify him when they discover a log with curly maple effects or if they find a large burl such as the one shown here and in the earlier article.
- After the violent clearing of people from the Scottish Highlands to make room for sheep, many Highlanders were forced to migrate to Canada to work as lumberjacks or were recruited into the British army to fight in the new colonies.
- Were he not clean-shaven with slicked back dark brown hair, and had he been wearing spiked hiking boots, the large man would look like a lumberjack fresh from the forest.
- There was a lumberjack who was sawing a tree, and the tree fell on his leg.
- After the vast forests of New England, Pennsylvania, and Ohio had been logged, lumbermen set their sights on Minnesota, home of some of the last large stands of unexploited forest east of the Rockies.
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