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Showing results for close-grained. Search instead for more+closegrained.
Definitions

close-grained

[klohs-greynd] / ˈkloʊsˈgreɪnd /






Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It is based largely on a close-grained analysis of masses of sea surface and air temperature data collected over the century.

From New York Times • Sep. 22, 2010

The wood they found was dense and close-grained, unlike the spongy grain of the younger, forced-growth trees that are planted today.

From Time Magazine Archive

In twelve books she has tried both to give a close-grained structure of regional manners and to trace the doings of the English merchant class from its ferment under Cromwell to its troubles under Attlee.

From Time Magazine Archive

The Upper Silurian limestones already described are succeeded by a most remarkable series of close-grained white sandstones, containing numerous beds of highly bituminous coal, and but few marine fossils.

From In the Arctic Seas A Narrative of the Discovery of the Fate of Sir John Franklin and his Companions by McClintock, Francis Leopold

"Rosemary pine" was heavy, hard, close-grained, with a thin rim of soft sap-wood.

From Trees Worth Knowing by Rogers, Julia Ellen




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