copse a thicket of small trees or shrubs; coppice
firm,strong,and can stand in its own fibre,.
Tundra! Hope I helped you! ~Dragonblue Hunter
A small area of trees can be called a grove, copse,woodlot, orchard, plantation, spinney, stand or thicket.
The plant that cannot stand straight due to its weak stems are called the climber plant. It climbs to other plants, trees, walls, or sticks to grow.
How about "forest" or "woods"? Is it too small for that? If so I'd go with "grove" or "cluster", I suppose. :) If it HAS to be one of your two choices, I'd go with group. Hows about a clump.
Yes. Goats can climb certain trees and stand in the branches.
to cut trees
A group of trees is a stand or a grove. An area that produces fruit trees is an orchard.
The commonest terms would be a stand, woodland, forest of trees.
Examples of collective nouns for shade trees a stand of shade trees or a grove of shade trees.
Trees is the name of the silversmith.
I would call that a "stand of trees"
Yes, the noun 'clump' is a standard collective noun for a small group of trees.Some other collective nouns for trees are:a stand of treesa grove of treesan orchard of treesa forest of treesa copse of trees
This is known as clear-cutting. All the trees are cut within the stand. The stand represents all trees within the boundary of the land owner's claim or a particular tract of ground.
Yes, the noun forest is a collective noun; a forest of trees. Other collective nouns for trees are a stand of trees, a copse of trees, or a grove of trees.
Clear felling
Linden Trees Near The Water