Your English writing platform
Free sign upThe phrase "climb on a tree" can be used in written English, but it would be more grammatically correct to say "climb a tree" or "climb up a tree".
"Climb on a tree" may be used informally in spoken language, but in formal writing, it is better to use the preposition "up" to show movement towards something. Example: The children wanted to climb up a tree to get a better view of the park.
Exact(1)
One signature entrée is Ants Climb on a Tree, which is actually a beef dish.
Similar(58)
Fliers for canoeing and rock climbing hung on a tree next to Gillette, a red brick building with white window frames.
Witnesses say he climbed on to a tree branch and lowering himself down into the pen, Agence France-Presse reported.
Here, under the prefabricated tent-like roof, children can eat picnic lunches in a "piazza", chase one another through a "willow tunnel", climb into a tree house, act on an outdoor stage, splash about in a water garden or swing from a climbing frame.
"As a child, I loved to climb on the tree, like a monkey," picking the best guavas, tossing them down to her friends, Phuc says.
There's a scene, for instance, where Margot is egged on to climb a tree that she always scampered up as a teenager.
"My mother said everyone who wanted to glorify Jesus, if they wanted something -- money or a house -- they had to climb up a tree they had on the mountain and shake it to give God glory," he said.
Do a somersault, run around in a circle, climb a tree, swing on the swingset, slide down the slide, climb on the monkey bars, or do a crazy dance.
If boys were boisterous, that was accepted, Ms. Rajalin said; a girl trying to climb a tree on an outing in the country was stopped.
Though we've long outgrown what Ma calls "that idiot stunt," Surachai still comes down from the mountain occasionally to climb a tree on the beach.
"He almost lost them, and his life, too, when the plane in which he made the first leg of the homeward trip climbed into a tree on the takeoff from Port Moresby," Time's in-house "F.Y.I".
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.
Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com