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hakea
[hey-kee-uh, hah-]
noun
any of various shrubs or trees of the genus Hakea, native to Australia, having evergreen, pinnate leaves and clusters of variously colored flowers.
hakea
/ ˈheɪkɪə, ˈhɑːkɪə /
noun
any shrub or tree of the Australian genus Hakea, having a hard woody fruit and often yielding a useful wood: family Proteaceae
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of hakea1
Example Sentences
In fact, when Royal Portrush last staged The Open in 2019, Peake had just completed a five-year sentence for serious assault at Hakea Prison in Western Australia.
In the Greater Blue Mountains, flames have ravaged about 50% of its heritage reserves, threatening regions inhabited by endangered species with small ranges, including a shrub called the Kowmung hakea, a lizard known as the Blue Mountains water skink, and the Wollemi pine, a “living fossil” discovered in 1994.
In the spectral beam of the truck’s lights against the dark, the canted succulents and bowed branches of hakea trees looked like the waving spindles of a deep-sea reef.
He was eventually sentenced as an adult to serve five years in Perth’s Hakea Prison, a maximum security facility, for people-smuggling offences.
Plant remains were found at St. Bathans, in a bed of clay, which have been identified by him as Hakea.
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