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What’s the difference between those terms?
Context would be a quaint little village nestled into a hillside covered with trees, sort of like this one.
WOODY:
4. Abounding in trees; wooded. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language)
1. abounding with woods; wooded. (Random House Kennerman Webster’s College Dictionary)
2. abounding in trees. (WordNet by Farlex)
The Free Dictionary
1. abounding or overgroon with woods M-W
1. abounding with wood; wooded Random House
1. (Of an area of land) covered with trees:
a woody dale ODO3. adjective (GROUP OF TREES) having many trees: They lived in a remote house set high on a woody hillside. CDO
countryside boisé (Collins-Robert French and English Dictionary, Éd. 1985)
WOODSY:
Relating to, characteristic of, or suggestive of the woods. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language)
(Forestry) US and Canadian of, reminiscent of, or connected with woods: a woodsy mountain hideaway. (CED)
abounding in trees (WordNet by Farlex)
The Free Dictionary
- having many trees : covered with trees M-W
North American Of, relating to, or characteristic of wood or woodlands:
trails through woodsy countryside ODO(informal, especially North American English) covered with trees; connected with woods OLD
US, informal 1. having many trees : covered with trees
a woodsy area MWLD(US) countryside boisé (Collins-Robert French and English Dictionary, Éd. 1985)
Ngram
Answer
Woodsy is informal. Really, that’s All there Is to it. Informal Usage can Sometimes be comical, intentionally or Otherwise.
Even back in high school I figured I’d be doing something science-y for a living.
This Kind of Usage can Also be a Term of Endearment, akin to baby talk.
Woody, on the other hand, is perfectly acceptable even in formal contexts, even though it does sound a bit silly.
Attribution
Source : Link , Question Author : Elian , Answer Author : Ricky
What’s the difference between those terms?
Context would be a quaint little village nestled into a hillside covered with trees, sort of like this one.
WOODY:
4. Abounding in trees; wooded. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language)
1. abounding with woods; wooded. (Random House Kennerman Webster’s College Dictionary)
2. abounding in trees. (WordNet by Farlex)
The Free Dictionary
1. abounding or overgroon with woods M-W
1. abounding with wood; wooded Random House
1. (Of an area of land) covered with trees:
a woody dale ODO3. adjective (GROUP OF TREES) having many trees: They lived in a remote house set high on a woody hillside. CDO
countryside boisé (Collins-Robert French and English Dictionary, Éd. 1985)
WOODSY:
Relating to, characteristic of, or suggestive of the woods. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language)
(Forestry) US and Canadian of, reminiscent of, or connected with woods: a woodsy mountain hideaway. (CED)
abounding in trees (WordNet by Farlex)
The Free Dictionary
- having many trees : covered with trees M-W
North American Of, relating to, or characteristic of wood or woodlands:
trails through woodsy countryside ODO(informal, especially North American English) covered with trees; connected with woods OLD
US, informal 1. having many trees : covered with trees
a woodsy area MWLD(US) countryside boisé (Collins-Robert French and English Dictionary, Éd. 1985)
Ngram
Crossword Clue Last Updated: 23/02/2021
Below are possible answers for the crossword clue Covered with trees.
8 letter answer(s) to covered with trees
TIMBERED
- covered with growing timber; «thickly timbered ridges clothed with loblolly pine and holly»; «hills timbered up to their summits»
- furnished with or made of wood or timbers; «timbered walls»
5 letter answer(s) to covered with trees
WOODY
- abounding in trees; «an arboreous landscape»; «violets in woodsy shady spots»; «a woody area near the highway»
- made hard like wood as the result of the deposition of lignin in the cell walls
- made of or containing or resembling wood; «woody plants»; «perennial herbs with woody stems»; «a woody taste»
Other crossword clues with similar answers to ‘Covered with trees’
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#1
Hello everyone,
Does »wooded’‘ meaning »(of land) covered with trees» (Oxford) when talking about a specific area (around a farm, near a city, etc) sound natural/correct in the examples that I made up below?
a. This area is very wooded. And it’s pretty near the river.
b. This area isn’t wooded. It looks more like a small desert.
Thank you in advance!
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#2
a sounds okay.
b is just not a natural use. It’s not a yes/no thing. An area that has woods can be described as wooded.
Roxxxannne
Senior Member
American English (New England and NYC)
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#3
I’d say ‘thickly wooded’ instead of ‘very wooded.’
I agree with kentix that b) is not a natural differentiation; there are a lot of intermediate ecological categories between ‘wooded’ and ‘desert-like.’
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#4
I think «wooded» is more commonly used as an attributive adjective rather than a predicative. thus: (and agreeing with Roxxxanne)
a. This is a [thickly/densely] wooded area . And it’s pretty near the river.
b. This isn’t a wooded area . It looks more like a small desert.
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#5
Thank you all very much.
Could I use »This isn’t a very wooded area»?
Thank you in advance!
Roxxxannne
Senior Member
American English (New England and NYC)
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#6
There’s a difference between being not wooded and having no greenery.
Grassy, marshy, or swampy areas have greenery.
You can also describe land with lots of small prickly bushes as scrubland (where scrub is like Mediterranean maquis).
.
Roxxxannne
Senior Member
American English (New England and NYC)
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#7
Thank you all very much.
Could I use »This isn’t a very wooded area»?
Thank you in advance!
It depends on what the area actually looks like and whether you are comparing it to some other area.
If my neighbor’s land has a lot of trees on it that are growing close together, and mine has trees on it, but not as many, I might say «My land isn’t very wooded. Hers is much more wooded.» But if I am trying to describe the nature of the stuff growing in the area I’m talking about, I’d be more specific:
Area A is less heavily wooded than Area B. Area A is covered with spruces, a few pines, and scattered oaks, all growing close together. Area B is thinly wooded. B has stands of young oaks, interspersed with small clearings where older trees used to stand; there is more underbrush in Area B than in Area A, where little sunlight penetrates the tree branches.
It’s difficult to know how to answer without more context.
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#8
Here I would just say, «This area doesn’t have a lot of trees.» Or if there aren’t any, I would just say «doesn’t have any trees».