Common forest tree of the eastern United States and Canada; used especially for pulpwood.
Shrubby two-needled pine of coastal northwestern United States; red to yellow-brown bark fissured into small squares.
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Small spruce of boggy areas of northeastern North America having spreading branches with dense foliage; inferior wood.
Large two-needled pine of southeastern United States with light soft wood.
1They proved to be a species of spruce pine, very proper for spars, which were then wanted.
2The objects observed were found to be a species of spruce pine, admirably fitted for masts and spars.
3We are still hewers of wood and drawers of water, but the spruce pine beetle is destroying our forests.
4The chief produce of the island is a kind of spruce pine, exceedingly straight and tall, which grows in great abundance.
5We found the tall trees to be a kind of spruce pine, very proper for spars, of which we were in want.
6A spruce pine also grew in abundance, and to a great size, and there were also found a number of cabbage palms.
7The Timber is Short & long leaf Pine Spruce Pine & fur.
8Spruce Pine's mineralogical wealth is a result of the area's unique geologic history.
9Spruce Pine is not a wealthy place.
10Spruce Pine, it turns out, is the source of the purest natural quartz- aspeciesof pristine sand-everfound on Earth.
11I saw a number of verry large Spruce Pine one of which I measured 14 feet around and verry tall.
12Any one, who is in the least acquainted with spruce pines, will find the tree which I have distinguished by that name.
13And Martin, 73, is now a resident of Mountain View Correctional Institution in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, after pleading guilty to securities fraud.
14Fresh from church on a cool, overcast Sunday morning in Spruce Pine, North Carolina, Alex Glover slides onto the plastic bench of a McDonald's booth.