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Discover LudwigThe phrase "bark of a tree" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is a common phrase used to describe the outer covering of a tree's trunk. Example: The smooth bark of the birch tree was a stark contrast to the rough, gnarled bark of the oak tree next to it.
Exact(53)
It's green and rough, like the bark of a tree...
"It grows as the bark of a tree," she said.
Don't a squirrel's sharp claws grip the soft bark of a tree when it climbs?
Or they scratch the bark of a tree inside the shrine, looking for digits.
When Jacques goes out to gather firewood, you can almost feel his fingers brushing against the bark of a tree.
A Samango monkey ferreted insects from the bark of a tree next to my room, and there were turtle tracks across the pure white sand.
Similar(7)
When a beetle burrows through the bark of a pine tree, the tree secretes a toxic resin into the tunnel, trapping and often killing the beetle.
"True" cinnamon comes from the bark of a cinnamon tree; many supermarket brands come from a cassia tree.
Later, I look up what does lie beneath the bark of a pine tree.
After swallowing powder from the bark of a cinchona tree, he saw his temperature rise.
Mrs. Taira probably obtained the yellow color from the bark of a local tree, Mr. Larsen said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com