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Etymologies
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Examples
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Broad-leaved trees (both evergreen and deciduous) may form a closed canopy beneath the larger, but more widely spaced conifers.
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Broad-leaved tea tree, tea tree, paperbark tea tree, belbowrie (Australia); melaleuca, cajeput, paperbark, punktree (USA); niaouli (New Caledonia)
Chapter 6 1983
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One of the most prominent of these is the Broad-leaved, which is considered not only earlier and more productive, but the best for manufacturing.
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Broad-leaved; the seeds are of a paler color than those of the Green
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The whole appearance of the plant is very different from the Common Broad-leaved; approaching the Curled endives, in general character.
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The leaves of this variety are neither so large nor so broad as those of the Broad-leaved Batavian Endive: they grow flat on the ground, and are curled at their edges.
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The trees were of the following kinds: Broad-leaved box, broad-leaved ironbark, Moreton Bay ash, bloodwood, and cypress pine.
Journal of Landsborough's Expedition from Carpentaria In search of Burke and Wills William Landsborough
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The stalks of this variety are shorter than those of the Broad-leaved; the leaves also are longer, narrower, and more sharply pointed; and the flowers are larger.
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Of this there are three chief varieties known in America by the popular names of Orinoco, Broad-leaved and Narrow-leaved.
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The Broad-leaved Lavender rarely blossoms; but, when this occurs, the leaves of the flower-stalk are differently formed from those of the lower part of the plant, and somewhat resemble those of the Common variety.
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