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Discover LudwigThe phrase "dense undergrowth" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a thick, tangled growth of plants, typically found in forests or natural areas.
Example: "The hikers struggled to make their way through the dense undergrowth, which was filled with thorny bushes and low-hanging branches."
Alternatives: "thick vegetation" or "heavy brush".
Exact(60)
Between these was a dense undergrowth of native herbs.
Are you an insomniac show-off, who has dense undergrowth and a pond in your garden?
These birds prefer dense undergrowth along rivers, tangled coastal scrub and dense second growth.
Wandering through the dense undergrowth, we came across little stone churches and clapboard houses.
Somewhere, hidden among the trees and dense undergrowth lurked our prey - the elusive clay pigeon.
Some species spread aggressively and can form a dense undergrowth that excludes other plants.
The nest is a loose construction of sticks placed in dense undergrowth.
For all their might and sophistication, Rudolph's pursuers were unable to find him in the dense undergrowth.
FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — The gravedigger hacked at the cemetery's dense undergrowth, clearing space for the day's Ebola victims.
In "The Origin of the Night," the camera flits deftly among images of dense undergrowth, tree trunks and leafy tops.
Tourists flock here to pay $250 for an hour tracking the animals on all fours through dense undergrowth.
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