firbound
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]firbound (not comparable)
- Bounded or contained by one or many fir trees; confined to the vicinity of fir trees.
- 1894, Mary Kavanaugh Oldham Eagle, The Congress of Women Held in the Woman′s Building, World′s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, U.S.A., 1893[1], page 726:
- The great fir branches are laden to the ground with rare mosses and lichens, and looking back over the bay, studded with innumerable firbound islands, snow-capped mountains in the distance, the effect is enchanting and most conducive to romantic and legendary lore.
- 1961, William Sansom, The Last Hours of Sandra Lee[2], page 229:
- Slate roofed and with liver-painted eaves, it stood in a weedy firbound garden.
- 2003, Daniel Mathews, Rocky Mountain Natural History: Grand Teton to Jasper[3], page 499:
- These eggs produce the fir-overwintering form which in turn engenders two forms, one wingless and firbound, the other flying to spruce to beget either the spruce-overwintering form or a short-lived intermediary sexual generation.