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wilga
/ ˈɪɡə /
noun
a small drought-resistant tree, Geijera parviflora, of Australia, having hard aromatic wood, white flowers, and foliage that resembles that of the willow
Word History and Origins
Origin of wilga1
Example Sentences
“Haiti has neither a mother nor a father,” Haitian Jean Brune Wilga said near the remains of the National Palace, the president’s former residence.
Wilga C. Lothes served as a member of the United States Air Force from May 30, 1990, through her retirement as a major on Dec. 1, 2015.
She is the daughter of John Lothes and the former Wilga Betty Pirner of Sulzbach-Rosenberg, Germany, of Elkins.
There was no sight or sound of a living thing in the wan, misty moonlight of the dawn, except the white-tail which was still crying from a wilga near Charley's hut.
But the travelling sheep and the Wilga sheep were boxed on the Old Man Plain.
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