Make a sentence using the word tree

Examples of how to use the word “tree” in a sentence. How to connect “tree” with other words to make correct English sentences.

tree (n): a tall plant that has a wooden trunk and branches that grow from its upper part:

Use “tree” in a sentence

The car struck the tree.
We need to plant some more trees here.
Can you climb up that tree?
If you don’t like where you are, then change it. You are not a tree!

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Synonym: Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree, Tree, corner, shoetree, tree diagram. Similar words: street, free, three, agree, greet, Greek, trend, freely. Meaning: [trɪː]  n. 1. a tall perennial woody plant having a main trunk and branches forming a distinct elevated crown; includes both gymnosperms and angiosperms 2. a figure that branches from a single root 3. English actor and theatrical producer noted for his lavish productions of Shakespeare (1853-1917). v. 1. force a person or an animal into a position from which he cannot escape 2. plant with trees 3. chase an animal up a tree 4. stretch (a shoe) on a shoetree. 

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1. The tree must be bent while it is young. 

2. Don’t climb a tree to look for fish. 

3. You cannot judge a tree by its bark. 

4. As the tree falls, so shall it lie. 

5. The apple never falls far from the tree

6. A tree is known by its fruit. 

7. Experience is the fruit of the tree of errors. 

8. The tree is known by its [his] fruit. 

9. As the tree, so the fruit. 

10. A tall tree catches the wind. 

11. The fruit does not fall far from the tree

12. A tree must be bent while it is young. 

13. Money does not grow on tree

13. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.

14. Every tree is known by its own fruit. 

15. Wit without learning is like a tree without fruit. 

16. Do not cut down the tree that gives you shade. 

17. A fool sees not the same tree that a wise man sees. William Blake 

18. When the tree is fallen, every one runs to it with his axe. 

19. Like tree, like fruit.

20. As the twig is bent so the tree is inclined. 

21. He was hipped when he dropped from the tree.

22. The wind had snapped the tree in two.

23. Birds are tootling in the tree.

24. He peeled the bark off that tree.

25. Put not your hand between the bark and the tree

26. A young twig is easier twisted than an old tree

27. He that would eat the fruit must climb the tree

28. He that would eat [have] the fruit must climb the tree

29. For me the different religions are beautiful flowers from the same garden, or they are branches of the same majestic tree. Therefore they are equally true, though being received and interpreted through human instruments equally imperfect. 

30. He will shoot higher who shoots at the moon [sun] than he who aims at a tree

More similar words: street, free, three, agree, greet, Greek, trend, freely, breeze, free of, freeze, screen, stretch, stream, treaty, streak, stress, preempt, set free, agree to, agree on, entreat, extreme, retreat, actress, get ready, disagree, free from, distress, stretch out. 

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∙ 11y ago


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A Tree can produce oxygen as well has carbon-dioxide.

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∙ 11y ago

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natkretep


  • #4

I work with names, and there is a similar phenomenon with in names such as the River Jordan (BrE) or the Jordan River (AmE). I call River the generic or descriptive element of the name (as opposed to the specific element Jordan), and some people might say classifier. And the structure is normal in street names too: Oxford (specific) Street (generic).

I don’t object to your calling them appositives. For me, appositives must refer to the same entity but not necessarily mean the same thing in isolation.

Englishmypassion


  • #5

I use the term appositive/case in opposition for a word/phrase that is set of by parenthetical commas since it refers to the same person/thing as the word or phrase just before it and is not essential for the sentence to have a complete meaning.

Narendra Modi, the Prime Minister of India, is a charismatic leader.
India’s run machine, Sachin Tendulkar, retired from cricket in 2013.

That’s what I read in Indian grammar books.

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