They pitched their tents in a small wooded area, among terebinth and oak trees.
2
The tamarind and the terebinth are not of its forest-trees.
3
For that we must add pitch from pines and terebinth trees and a fine sulfur powder.
4
The shrubs and the terebinth-trees contain their orchestras.
5
Next to the "terebinth" was the tomb of the favorite horse of Lucius Verus.
6
Evergreen oak in all directions, but with broader leaf than in Palestine; also some terebinth-trees and wild holly-oaks.
7
He'd experimented with various mixtures until he mixed it with pitch from pines and terebinth trees and sulfur.
8
I stay in my tent under this terebinth tree; for I am here as a stranger and a sojourner.'
9
He first planted himself in its heart by Sichem, but outside the city, under the terebinth tree of Moreh.
10
The gently undulating land was clothed with rich grass, and sprinkled (not thronged) with timber, chiefly terebinth.
11
Not far from the city wall there is a superb terebinth tree, now in the full glory of its shining green leaves.
12
The Shekh, with a number of lazy villagers, is still seated under the terebinth, in a tent of shade, impervious to the sun.
13
The turpentine (oleum terebinth inum) was not the same as that experimented on by Kepler but a purer and lighter article (Sp.
14
And in thy court-yard grows the untithed rue, Huge as the olives of Gethsemane, And ancient as the terebinth of Hebron, Coeval with the world.
15
Those of the Megachile (M. sericans, FONSCOL), who fashions her goblets with robinia-, holm-, and terebinth-leaves, were inhabited by Coelioxys octodentata (A Parasitic Bee.-Translator'sNote.
16
Broad Atlantic terebinths spread their branches and sway meditatively in the breeze.