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When Suyuan says her husband is a man made of too much wood, she means that he is rigid and unyielding. This implies that he is inflexible, not open to change, and lacking in emotion or empathy.
Made from wood.
It means your husband said or did something that you found to be funny. It made you laugh.
stiff or made out of wood
It is a club traditionally made of wood, designed to hit the longest distances. Today it is frequently made out of metal as well as wood.
A kirk is a church in Scotland. So a church made of wood or in a wood.
It can be. It is a participle of the verb to wood (to cover with trees), which has virtually no modern use. The related adjective wooden is used to mean made of wood.
The Spruce Goose was the biggest aircraft ever made, made with completely wood.
"Made of" and "Made from" can mean the same thing. "That can is made from aluminum." "That can is made of aluminum." However, they can't be used the same in every situation. You can say: "That house is made of wood and made from workers." But you can't say: "That house is made of workers and made from wood."
If you mean the dolls, they are made of plastic, but if you mean the BBQ well they are made of metal as far as I'm concerned.
I'm guessing you mean the skeleton, which was made of wood.
Of course not i mean xylophones from back then were made out of wood. But now they are made out of iron.