释义 |
Definition of woodcutter in English: woodcutternounˈwʊdkʌtəˈwʊdˌkədər 1A person who cuts down trees or branches, especially for fuel. 伐木工;砍柴人,樵夫 Example sentencesExamples - Mentionably, professional woodcutters, who are adept at handsawing of timber are hired by the timber smugglers to carry on the business.
- No longer do the leaders of the smartest city governments view the environment as merely a source of dirt for the homebuilders, or wood for the woodcutters.
- The people we met were like the cast from an old faery tale: bearded woodcutters sat chatting in clearings of the forest; cowherds and shepherdesses wandered past with their flocks, shy and silent.
- Members of the Santa Fe community remember this period as one in which they supplied themselves with kiln fuel from the pine branches and slash left in the forest by the Quiroga woodcutters.
- My first impression of Woolrich came not from hunters, but woodcutters atop pine tree forested mountains when I was a young U.S. Forest Service firefighter.
- He was followed by other cattlemen, as well as woodcutters eager to exploit the tall stands of cedar.
- This is the place where some woodcutters cut down trees.
- Many woodcutters know Purepecha names for trees, which correspond closely to the Linnean system of names of species, and the burning and construction qualities of different kinds of wood.
- The methods of tree felling were altered and piece work was introduced, doubling the woodcutters ' wages and leading to increased costs.
- In addition to the practical considerations favoring the dry wood of dead trees over the wet and heavy wood of living trees, woodcutters in Santa Fe express, and partly practice, an ethic of woodcutting.
- The title provides aids to let you know if a woodcutter has run out of trees in his designated area but is unable to tell you specifically why there is a mass of settlers sitting around idle.
- There was an inn in the trees at the Bains de l' Allaiz where the woodcutters stopped to drink, and we sat inside warmed by the stove and drank hot red wine with spices and lemon in it.
- The film depicts one day in the life of a woodcutter in rural Argentina - precious little happens but it's well worth your patience, especially because Alonso packs the screen with so many stark and beautiful landscapes.
- Occasionally they find a few sparks, kept alive in a humble woodcutter's cottage, or in a small fire started by a few of their fellow wanderers.
- It has little to say about management techniques for the kinds of nonlumber wood that woodcutters require and does not provide a reliable parameter of growth rates for the species that woodcutters prefer for cooking fuel.
- What's keeping the seemingly decent woodcutter from telling what he really knows?
- He arrived on the Belgravia in 1864, with a 15-year sentence to serve for house-breaking and worked as a woodcutter, sawyer, fencer and general labouring teamster.
- Or maybe he could send a strong message on his attitude to forestry and logging by putting champion woodcutter, David Foster, in the job.
- The son of a Perthshire woodcutter, Macintosh himself became a forester.
- Two cars whizzed by, then the woodcutter's truck passed, laden with dried branches for cooking fires.
2A person who makes woodcuts. 木刻家 Example sentencesExamples - Dutch tradesmen and expert woodcutters were transported from Amsterdam.
- If it remains the purview of expert resource managers, woodcutters are denied a chance to participate in the interpretation of results and are unlikely to undertake institutional change.
- Garcia observed woodcutters selling firewood door to door in Quiroga, and one admitted cutting pine in Santa Fe.
- So why have Santa Fe woodcutters been unable to develop a more appropriate knowledge system to inform their woodcutting practices?
- However by January the company was advertising again for teamsters and woodcutters, offering thirteen shillings and sixpence per ton for gum, mallee or any other suitable wood delivered at the mine.
- They stopped that evening in a clearing that was obviously used by woodcutters who probably didn't like trespassers.
- Even in the 1840s the pond was visited frequently by fishermen and woodcutters, and Thoreau could hear the rumble of the Boston-to-Fitchburg railroad as it passed along the western shore.
- He has worked as a joiner, woodcutter, ship-repairer, road-builder, sign-painter, farmer and metal-worker.
- Per Kirkeby's new multi-perspectival paintings are like images from a woodcutter's tale, told at the edge of the dark forest.
- The Crew family were soon followed by others, mostly teamsters or woodcutters.
- He needed men for his army, smiths for his forges, cooks, hunters, healers, servants, woodcutters, stonemasons and more.
- There was nothing along that road at all, and it was hardly a road; only a track that woodcutters used.
- Koch, a highly educated Dane who had worked as a woodcutter and trader on the Montana frontier before becoming a successful banker, and was a founder of Montana State University.
- Because Thoreau, the railroad, and woodcutters have encroached on Walden, White Pond is the gem of all these.
- There was much hardship felt by individuals such as miners, woodcutters, bullock drivers and storekeepers.
- The first European people to use it were the absconders of the ship Coromandel in 1837, followed by Tasmanian woodcutters.
- Some of the earliest settlers around the mine were miners, woodcutters, teamsters, and before long a blacksmith.
- Many Icelandic men took laboring jobs as unskilled factory workers and woodcutters, or as dockworkers in Milwaukee when they first arrived.
- If Carrington had ordered Fetterman to simply relieve the wood train, there was no point in Fetterman leading his mission in the direction of the ridge-away from the woodcutters.
- Just as many farmers shunned cast iron plows long after they were proven to be superior to most wooden plows, woodcutters had a natural tendency to use what was familiar and effective.
Derivativesnounˈwʊdkʌtɪŋˈwʊdˌkədɪŋ From ceramics, fibreglass sculptures, terracotta, fabric printing, printmaking, woodcutting, oil painting to, now, working with mixed media and acrylic on canvas, she is invariably experimenting and changing. Example sentencesExamples - Future conservation will rely increasingly on reserving forests from woodcutting, with the accent on preservation rather than conservation and a likelihood of forest degradation by severe fire.
- They would help the communities learn which of their organizational traditions are most useful for stand control, for coordinating woodcutting in specific places, and perhaps for distributing the fruits of harvesting the forest.
- Hima applies particularly to wildlife and forestry and usually designates an area of land where grazing and woodcutting are restricted, or where certain animal species are protected.
- They identified 11 types of communities and 42 possible transitions, corresponding to fire, grazing, and woodcutting under different environmental conditions.
- The defendants relied upon their prior maintenance of the rail fence, their regular pasturing of cattle and regular woodcutting to establish a possessory title for them and their predecessors in title.
- The deputy field director today at Ranthambhore, for instance, the indomitable G. V. Reddy, has reversed years of official apathy toward grazing, woodcutting and poaching in the park.
- The nobility of woodcutting and its concomitant centrality to British Honduras' mission and existence became associated with the white European side.
- He learned woodcutting in his father's workshop and studied sculpture in Brussels, but he was essentially self-taught in painting, which became his main occupation from 1908.
- The 250 stalls offer traditional craft items such as woodcutting from the Erzgebirge and ceramic from Lausitz.
- You know how the theremin, grandfather of the modern synthesizer, sounds kind of like the singing saw - an instrument as old as woodcutting?
- When it was time to build the fire, Quent Stiles and John Blinks, our woodcutting and pit-digging Harvard Medical School students, rounded up volunteers and marched off with ax and saw to a clump of trees.
- Men combined agriculture with seasonal migrant work, charcoal burning, woodcutting, and peddling, while women took up wet-nursing, spinning, and weaving.
- When those engaged in woodcutting, woodcarting, raising ore, dressing ore and so on are included, the total number of men working for the company numbered nearly seven hundred!
- The workshop, equipped with the necessary tools, held a number of courses in techniques - lithography, woodcutting and etching.
- Fields surrounded the entire village, surrounded in turn by forest, thinned by woodcutting and clearance for pastures.
- They spend a smaller part of their lives in the forest and intersperse woodcutting and livestock-herding activities in the forest with long absences for schooling, work in Mexican cities, and emigration to the United States.
- After the war, Peter Casserly worked on the wharves and got involved in woodcutting and cray fishing.
- In 1969, an anthropologist working in Santa Fe de la Laguna decried the uncontrolled woodcutting and timber raiding that was finishing off the forests there.
- In addition to the practical considerations favoring the dry wood of dead trees over the wet and heavy wood of living trees, woodcutters in Santa Fe express, and partly practice, an ethic of woodcutting.
Definition of woodcutter in US English: woodcutternounˈwo͝odˌkədərˈwʊdˌkədər 1A person who cuts down trees or branches, especially for fuel. 伐木工;砍柴人,樵夫 Example sentencesExamples - Occasionally they find a few sparks, kept alive in a humble woodcutter's cottage, or in a small fire started by a few of their fellow wanderers.
- Mentionably, professional woodcutters, who are adept at handsawing of timber are hired by the timber smugglers to carry on the business.
- Or maybe he could send a strong message on his attitude to forestry and logging by putting champion woodcutter, David Foster, in the job.
- Many woodcutters know Purepecha names for trees, which correspond closely to the Linnean system of names of species, and the burning and construction qualities of different kinds of wood.
- The film depicts one day in the life of a woodcutter in rural Argentina - precious little happens but it's well worth your patience, especially because Alonso packs the screen with so many stark and beautiful landscapes.
- In addition to the practical considerations favoring the dry wood of dead trees over the wet and heavy wood of living trees, woodcutters in Santa Fe express, and partly practice, an ethic of woodcutting.
- The title provides aids to let you know if a woodcutter has run out of trees in his designated area but is unable to tell you specifically why there is a mass of settlers sitting around idle.
- Two cars whizzed by, then the woodcutter's truck passed, laden with dried branches for cooking fires.
- He was followed by other cattlemen, as well as woodcutters eager to exploit the tall stands of cedar.
- No longer do the leaders of the smartest city governments view the environment as merely a source of dirt for the homebuilders, or wood for the woodcutters.
- It has little to say about management techniques for the kinds of nonlumber wood that woodcutters require and does not provide a reliable parameter of growth rates for the species that woodcutters prefer for cooking fuel.
- There was an inn in the trees at the Bains de l' Allaiz where the woodcutters stopped to drink, and we sat inside warmed by the stove and drank hot red wine with spices and lemon in it.
- The methods of tree felling were altered and piece work was introduced, doubling the woodcutters ' wages and leading to increased costs.
- My first impression of Woolrich came not from hunters, but woodcutters atop pine tree forested mountains when I was a young U.S. Forest Service firefighter.
- The people we met were like the cast from an old faery tale: bearded woodcutters sat chatting in clearings of the forest; cowherds and shepherdesses wandered past with their flocks, shy and silent.
- What's keeping the seemingly decent woodcutter from telling what he really knows?
- This is the place where some woodcutters cut down trees.
- The son of a Perthshire woodcutter, Macintosh himself became a forester.
- He arrived on the Belgravia in 1864, with a 15-year sentence to serve for house-breaking and worked as a woodcutter, sawyer, fencer and general labouring teamster.
- Members of the Santa Fe community remember this period as one in which they supplied themselves with kiln fuel from the pine branches and slash left in the forest by the Quiroga woodcutters.
2A person who makes woodcuts. 木刻家 Example sentencesExamples - They stopped that evening in a clearing that was obviously used by woodcutters who probably didn't like trespassers.
- He needed men for his army, smiths for his forges, cooks, hunters, healers, servants, woodcutters, stonemasons and more.
- He has worked as a joiner, woodcutter, ship-repairer, road-builder, sign-painter, farmer and metal-worker.
- However by January the company was advertising again for teamsters and woodcutters, offering thirteen shillings and sixpence per ton for gum, mallee or any other suitable wood delivered at the mine.
- There was nothing along that road at all, and it was hardly a road; only a track that woodcutters used.
- Garcia observed woodcutters selling firewood door to door in Quiroga, and one admitted cutting pine in Santa Fe.
- Koch, a highly educated Dane who had worked as a woodcutter and trader on the Montana frontier before becoming a successful banker, and was a founder of Montana State University.
- Some of the earliest settlers around the mine were miners, woodcutters, teamsters, and before long a blacksmith.
- If it remains the purview of expert resource managers, woodcutters are denied a chance to participate in the interpretation of results and are unlikely to undertake institutional change.
- So why have Santa Fe woodcutters been unable to develop a more appropriate knowledge system to inform their woodcutting practices?
- The Crew family were soon followed by others, mostly teamsters or woodcutters.
- The first European people to use it were the absconders of the ship Coromandel in 1837, followed by Tasmanian woodcutters.
- There was much hardship felt by individuals such as miners, woodcutters, bullock drivers and storekeepers.
- Dutch tradesmen and expert woodcutters were transported from Amsterdam.
- Even in the 1840s the pond was visited frequently by fishermen and woodcutters, and Thoreau could hear the rumble of the Boston-to-Fitchburg railroad as it passed along the western shore.
- Just as many farmers shunned cast iron plows long after they were proven to be superior to most wooden plows, woodcutters had a natural tendency to use what was familiar and effective.
- Because Thoreau, the railroad, and woodcutters have encroached on Walden, White Pond is the gem of all these.
- If Carrington had ordered Fetterman to simply relieve the wood train, there was no point in Fetterman leading his mission in the direction of the ridge-away from the woodcutters.
- Many Icelandic men took laboring jobs as unskilled factory workers and woodcutters, or as dockworkers in Milwaukee when they first arrived.
- Per Kirkeby's new multi-perspectival paintings are like images from a woodcutter's tale, told at the edge of the dark forest.
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