What is another word for foresters?

Pronunciation: [fˈɒɹɪstəz] (IPA)

Foresters are professionals responsible for managing forest resources, including harvesting timber, replanting trees, and protecting forests from damage and degradation. They are also known as forest managers, woodland officers, and tree experts. Other synonyms for foresters include forest rangers, forest technicians, and forest ecologists, depending on their specific area of expertise. Furthermore, some foresters specialize in forest conservation and restoration, wildlife management, or fire management, and may be known as forest conservationists, wildlife biologists, or fire prevention officers. Whatever their title or specialty, foresters are essential for preserving the natural beauty, biological diversity, and economic value of forests around the world.

Synonyms for Foresters:

What are the paraphrases for Foresters?

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What are the hypernyms for Foresters?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Foresters

I had this thrill when I walked through Gommecourt-Gommecourt the terrible, and the graveyard of so many brave London boys who fell here on July 1-and up through Gommecourt Park, with its rows of riven trees, to a point beyond, and to a far outpost where a group of soldiers attached to the Sherwood foresters of the 46th Division, full of spirit and gaiety, in spite of the deadly menace about them, had dragged up a heavy trench-mortar and its monstrous winged shells, which they were firing into a copse 500 yards away where Fritz was holding out.
"From Bapaume to Passchendaele, 1917"
Philip Gibbs
It was these Scots and these English who bore the brunt of the great German counter-attack on the afternoon of August 1. After fighting their way forward past the pill-box emplacements or concrete redoubts with a stiff and separate fight at the ruin of an estaminet on the cross-roads at Westhoek, where a sergeant and ten or twelve men captured forty of the enemy, the Sherwood foresters and their comrades took "cover" during the night, exposed to fierce shell-fire and drenched in the rain, now falling steadily, and filling the shell-craters with mud and water, so that men were up to their waist in them.
"From Bapaume to Passchendaele, 1917"
Philip Gibbs
South of the attack in Glencorse Copse and Polygon Wood the assault in Inverness Copse and Shrewsbury Forest, across the bog-lands round the Dumbarton Lakes, was made by English battalions, including the Queen's, the East and West Kents, the Northumberland Fusiliers, Sherwood foresters, the King's Royal Rifles, and the West Riding battalions.
"From Bapaume to Passchendaele, 1917"
Philip Gibbs

Famous quotes with Foresters

  • A state of princes; a skulk of friars; a skulk of thieves; an observance of hermits; a lying of pardoners; a subtiltie of serjeants; an untruth of sompners; a multiplying of husbands; an incredibility of cuckolds; a safeguard of porters; a stalk of foresters; a blast of hunters; a draught of butlers; a temperance of cooks; a melody of harpers; a poverty of pipers; a drunkenship of coblers; a disguising of taylors; a wandering of tinkers; a malepertness of pedlars; a fighting of beggars; a rayful, (that is, a netful) of knaves; a blush of boys; a bevy of ladies; a nonpatience of wives; a gagle of women; a gagle of geese; a superfluity of nuns; and a herd of harlots. Similar terms were applied to inanimate things, as a caste of bread, a cluster of grapes, a cluster of nuts, &c.
    Joseph Strutt
  • He [Válmíki] was the son of Varuna, the regent of the waters, one of whose names is Prachetas. According to the Adhyátmá Rámáyana, the sage, although a Bráhman by birth, associated with foresters and robbers. Attacking on one occasion the seven Rishis, they expostulated with him successfully, and taught him the mantra of Ráma reversed, or Mará, Mará, in the inaudible repetition of which he remained immovable for thousands of years, so that when the sages returned to the same spot they found him still there, converted into a or ant-hill, by the nests of the termites, whence his name of Válmíki.
    Valmiki

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