cane - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • tie: Tie new canes onto wire in a fan shape.
  • carry: For example, a person carrying a white cane or accompanied by a guide dog, is visually impaired.

Adjective modifier

  • gold-headed: He wore, when he walked out, a purple silk hat and carried a gold-headed cane.
  • crushed: The color is formed during extraction of the sugar juice from the crushed cane.
  • white: There was no mobility training we were issued with a strong walking stick; white canes did not exist then.
  • raw: It retains some of the nutrients found in raw cane S Return to Top Salicylates Salicylates are a type of Phenol.
  • tall: Train tomato plants up tall canes or up strings.
  • thick: A stout relative of R. excelsa with a rather stronger look, thicker canes and broader leaflets.

Modifies a noun

  • molasses: Good sources are:- liver, kidney, heart, egg yolk, legumes, cocoa, cane molasses, shellfish and parsley.
  • refining: What is the likely impact on cane sugar refining in the UK?
  • toad: On the way Limpy thinks if a cane toad became a mascot then maybe the humans would stop killing cane toads.
  • sugar: What is the likely impact on cane sugar refining in the UK?
  • cutter: They work as sugar cane cutters, tobacco and coffee pickers and construction laborers.
  • refinery: Tate & Lyle's household names For many decades Tate & Lyle's cane sugar refineries have produced some famous consumer brands.

Noun used with modifier

  • bamboo: Thread a short bamboo cane through the wire at the back to keep the whole thing rigid.
  • sugar: Its daily intake of 28,000 tons of sugar cane is supplied by 1200 contract farmers.
  • raspberry: The fungus infects young canes through wounds which are initially caused by raspberry cane midge attack, late spring frosts or pruning.
  • candy: He had no opinion about elves or candy canes.
  • rattan: A current project in South Kalimantan is helping villagers grow rattan canes in previously harvested production forests.
  • split: They have been building and repairing split cane rods since the 1960s.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.