n
Musa textilis, a species of banana tree native to the Philippines grown for its textile, rope- and papermaking fibre.
n
A large Brazilian pineapple.
n
Bogo; a Philippine fruit tree, Garuga floribunda, from the family Burseraceae.
n
A medium-sized tropical African tree, Mitragyna stipulosa (syn. M. macrophylla, nom. illeg.), from the family Rubiaceae.
n
A large Asian tree, Aleurites moluccana, that produces candlenuts.
n
A false acacia; robinia tree, Robinia pseudoacacia.
n
Flat grassland in Africa interspersed with acacia.
n
Synonym of acajou (“wood”)
n
A moderate reddish brown that is slightly yellower and stronger than mahogany
n
A tree of the West Indies and northern South America, Malpighia glabra.
n
Alternative spelling of ackee [A tropical evergreen tree, Blighia sapida, related to the lychee and longan.]
n
A tropical American evergreen shrub, Bixa orellana; the lipstick tree.
n
A tropical evergreen tree, Blighia sapida, related to the lychee and longan.
n
A tree from tropical Africa, Monodora myristica (Annonaceae).
n
Sarcocephalus latifolius (synonyms Sarcocephalus esculentus, Nauclea latifolia), a deciduous rubiaceous climbing shrub of west tropical Africa, or its fruit.
n
Pterocarpus erinaceus, or other African Pterocarpus spp.
n
Heartwood from trees of genus Aquilaria, especially Aquilaria malaccensis (syn. A. agallocha), infected with mold (Phialophora parasitica), which produce an aromatic resin in response to this infestation.
n
(Philippines) The tree Casuarina equisetifolia.
n
The edible fruit of the moriche palm.
n
The tree Sesbania grandiflora.
n
The Japanese red pine, Pinus densiflora.
n
A small tree of New Zealand (Olearia furfuracea).
n
A plant of the genus Albizia; a siris or silk tree.
n
The carob, a leguminous tree of the Mediterranean region.
n
Prosopis nigra, the black carob tree, a leguminous tree species that inhabits the Gran Chaco ecoregion in Argentina and Paraguay
n
Terminalia catappa, Indian almond or tropical almond, in family Combretaceae
n
A tropical fruit tree native to the South Pacific (Spondias dulcis).
n
A large shrub or small tree found in and around water in the African tropics, Aeschynomene elaphroxylon, formerly used to make rafts due to its extremely lightweight wood.
n
Hymenaea verrucosa (Fabaceae), a New World tree producing copal.
n
The reddish, mottled or striped wood of this tree, used in cabinet-making.
n
Phyllanthus emblica, a deciduous tree.
n
A large Asian tree with corky bark, grown ornamentally in colder climates and used in traditional Chinese medicine, Phellodendron amurense
n
The wood of the Indian tree Artocarpus hirsutus.
n
A leguminous tree, Anadenanthera colubrina, native to South America, with traditional medicinal properties and tannin-rich wood used in tanning.
n
The tree Pouteria superba and (especially) its wood.
n
custard apple (tree of the genus Annona and its fruit)
n
The medium hardwood tree Dipterocarpus grandiflorus.
n
The wood of an arariba tree.
n
An individual plant (tree) of the genus Araucaria.
n
Any member of the genus Areca of about fifty species of single-stemmed palms in the family Arecaceae, found in humid tropical forests.
n
A palm tree (Arenga pinnata, syn. Saguerus saccharifer) which yields sago, wine, and fibres for ropes.
n
A pine tree of the species Pinus cembra, native to alpine Europe
n
A smallish Australian rainforest tree, Hedycarya angustifolia
n
A leguminous shrub with smooth cinnamon brown bark, Senna auriculata.
n
The avocado tree, Persea americana, of the laurel family.
n
(Guyana, chiefly attributively) The palm tree Astrocaryum vulgare which is native to the Amazon Rainforest region.
n
An Asiatic tree (Melia azedarach), common in the southern United States, commonly called bead tree, chinaberry, etc.
n
The rind of the fruit of several East Indian species of acacia, especially Vachellia nilotica, formerly Acacia arabica; neb-neb. It contains gallic acid and tannin, and is used for dyeing drab.
n
A tree native to South Asia, Vachellia nilotica subsp. indica, formerly Acacia nilotica subsp. indica.
n
Garcinia gardneriana, a dioecious evergreen of the Amazon Basin, producing fruit with edible arils.
n
A tropical fruit tree from India, Aegle marmelos.
n
(India) The tree Mimusops elengi.
n
Manilkara bidentata, a large South American tree that yields latex and edible yellow berries.
n
Taxodium distichum, deciduous conifer trees native to often-flooded areas of the southeastern and south central parts of the United States.
n
A large tree, Ochroma pyramidale, native to tropical America, with wood that is very light in weight.
n
Clusia major, a tropical and subtropical tree species native to the Americas, invasive elsewhere.
n
A Southeast Asian tree, Lagerstroemia speciosa, with medicinal leaves.
n
(Philippines) The wood of the tree Mimusops elengi.
n
The tree Wallaceodendron celebicum.
n
A tropical Indian fig tree, Ficus benghalensis, that has many aerial roots.
n
A tree, Adansonia digitata (and similar species), native to tropical Africa, having a broad swollen trunk and edible gourd-like hanging fruits.
n
(obsolete) A kind of gum obtained from a tree, probably the acacia Vachellia gummifera.
n
A South American mimosa tree, Stryphnodendron adstringens (formerly Stryphnodendron barbatimao), which has an astringent, tannin-rich bark.
n
The palm tree Iriartea ventricosa.
n
West Indian elm (Guazuma ulmifolia)
n
Pouteria costata, a coastal tree native to New Zealand and Norfolk Island (Australia), in New Zealand also called the tawapou; its leathery leaves have prominently raised primary nerves/veins, and branches exude a milky fluid if cut.
n
(Australia) Any of various eucalypts with hard wood, especially Eucalyptus botryoides.
n
Synonym of false sandalwood.
n
A Singaporean tree, Prunus polystachya.
n
The poisonous fruit of the manchineel (Hippomane mancinella).
n
Alternative spelling of bead tree [Melia azedarach, a deciduous or semi-evergreen tree with poisonous fruit, native to India, Southeast Asia, and northern Australia.]
n
Alternative form of beleric myrobalan [A tree native to India and used in ayurvedic medicine, Terminalia bellirica]
n
An Asiatic palm, Areca catechu, whose seeds are betel nuts.
n
(uncommon) A species of Australian tree, the forest red gum, glossy-leaved box, or shiny-leaved box, Eucalyptus tereticornis.
n
A tree from the Philippines, which bears small, edible fruit in clusters, Antidesma bunius
n
The Indian tree Pterocarpus marsupium.
n
A hardwood tree, Eusideroxylon zwageri, of Malaysia, Borneo, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
n
Garcinia indica, a plant in the mangosteen family.
n
A hardwood tree of the genus Calophyllum.
n
Simarouba amara, a neotropical tree.
n
paradise tree Simarouba glauca, native to Florida, the Caribbean and Central America
n
Eucalyptus sieberi, an Australian tree.
n
An Australian tree (Castanospermum australe), also called Moreton Bay chestnut.
n
Eucalyptus aggregata, of south eastern Australia
n
European black pine, Pinus nigra
n
A tropical American bush of the genus Melampodium
n
Alternative form of black gum (“tree”) [A tree native to eastern North America, Nyssa sylvatica.]
n
African blackwood (Dalbergia melanoxylon), of Africa
n
Diospyros whyteana, a species of tree with edible fruit, native to Africa
n
(Jamaica) Alternative form of blossom. [A flower, especially one indicating that a fruit tree is fruiting; (collectively) a mass of such flowers.]
n
The bleeding heart tree, Homalanthus populifolius, an Australian rainforest plant.
n
(Australia) Certain eucalypts
n
Pteroceltis tatarinowii, a species of tree endemic to China.
n
Alternative form of blue gum [Any of various eucalyptus trees having blueish leaves, especially Eucalyptus globulus.]
n
The peepul tree, Ficus religiosa, regarded as sacred by Hindus and Buddhists.
n
The Indian fig tree, sacred fig, Ficus religiosa, that is sacred to Buddhism.
n
Peumus boldus, a monimiaceous tree.
n
(Australia) Any of various species of wattle tree (genus Acacia), especially Acacia pendula and Acacia glaucescens.
n
A pine native to mountains in the Balkans and southern Italy, Pinus heldreichii.
n
(Australia) Various species of Eucalyptus trees are popularly called various kinds of boxes, on the basis of the nature of their wood, bark, or appearance for example, the drooping (Eucalyptus bicolor), shiny-leaved (Eucalyptus tereticornis), black, or ironbark box trees.
n
A tree of Brazil, Mimosa scabrella
n
The hard, brown wood of a tree of the tribe Caesalpinieae; originally the sappan, Biancaea sappan, of the East Indies, and later the brazilwood, Paubrasilia echinata.
n
Bertholletia excelsa, a tree native to tropical South America.
n
Schizolobium parahyba, a tree species from tropical America, notable for its fast growth.
n
Bauhinia forficata, a species of flowering tree.
n
A South American tree, Schinus terebinthifolia, grown for its attractive glossy evergreen leaves and red fruits, but also extremely invasive in tropical and subtropical regions.
n
The Paraná pine, Araucaria angustifolia
n
A cycad, found in tropical and southern Africa, whose thick main stem can be made into a type of flour similar to sago
n
An evergreen tree, Artocarpus altilis, native to islands of the east Indian Ocean and western Pacific Ocean.
n
A South American hardwood, Sloanea jamaicensis
n
Any of various Australian acacia trees, especially Acacia harpophylla of New South Wales and Queensland.
n
Alternative form of brigalow [Any of various Australian acacia trees, especially Acacia harpophylla of New South Wales and Queensland.]
n
Any of a small number of different small, slow-growing pine trees found in the western United States, of Pinus subg. Ducampopinus, Pinus subsect. Balfourianae, some of which are over 4,000 years old.
n
A tree (Terminalia latifolia, now Terminalia catappa) of Jamaica.
n
The timber of various species of Guibourtia.
n
Eremophila mitchellii, a sandalwood-like plant native to Australia.
n
Ziziphus mucronata, a tree native to southern Africa.
n
A flowering tree, Spanish cherry or medlar (Mimusops elengi), whose flowers are used in Thai herbal medicine.
n
Pouteria multiflora (broad-leaved lucuma)
n
Alternative form of bully tree [Sideroxylon spp.]
n
The bunya pine, Araucaria bidwillii, native to Queensland.
n
(Australia) Any of various cycads in the genus Macrozamia.
n
The mangrove tree (Conocarpus erectus, family Combretaceae) a tropical and subtropical species.
n
Eucalyptus amplifolia, a tree of Australia.
n
Cordyline australis, a hardy, widely branched monocot tree endemic to New Zealand, a traditional source of food and fiber.
n
The fruit or pod of the cocoa plant
n
Synonym of quinquino (“tree of genus Myroxylon”)
n
A tree originally from Mexico to Colombia, Gliricidia sepium, grown in the tropics worldwide to shade crops such as cacao and coffee, as well as for intercropping due to its nitrogen-fixing roots.
n
The tree Bursera simaruba.
n
(countable) The Senegal mahogany tree (Khaya senegalensis).
n
A tropical tree (Chrysophyllum cainito of family Sapotaceae) and its fruit, the star apple.
n
Any of several trees of the genus Melaleuca that have white, spongy bark.
n
Any of other species of genus Crescentia.
n
A valuable furniture wood from India and Ceylon, of a hazel-brown color, with black stripes, very hard in texture. It is a kind of ebony obtained from species of Diospyros, especially Diospyros quaesita.
n
A fragrant wood; agalloch.
n
A species of agalloch, or aloes wood, of a dusky or mottled colour, of a light, friable texture, and less fragrant than calambac; used by cabinetmakers.
n
A tree of the species Platanus racemosa
n
The reddish wood of this tree.
n
(obsolete) Indian gamboge, the gum resin of Garcinia morella, used as a cathartic.
n
logwood (Haematoxylum campechianum)
n
A tree of species Haematoxylon campechianum.
n
The resinous exudation of the hemlock tree (Abies canadensis, now Picea glauca); hemlock gum.
n
The tree Cananga odorata.
n
Nauclea orientalis (Southeast Asia to Australia)
n
A Brazilian tree, Araucaria angustifolia
n
A flowering tree (Aleurites moluccana and Aleurites rockinghamensis) of the family Euphorbiaceae, also known as candleberry, Indian walnut, kemiri, varnish tree or kukui nut tree.
n
Pterocelastrus tricuspidatus, a medium-sized evergreen tree indigenous to South Africa.
n
The wood of the tree Liriodendron tulipifera.
n
An African flowering tree often planted as an ornamental (Calodendrum capense)
n
An African shrub grown in warmer climates for its colorful honeysuckle-like flowers, Tecoma capensis
n
Ochna arborea, an African tree.
n
Cryptocarya woodii, a shrub or small forest tree, native to southern and eastern Africa.
n
A South African tree with yellowish wood, Podocarpus latifolius, or the wood from this tree.
n
A calabur tree (Muntingia calabura, sole species of Muntingia).
n
A Brazilian tree of the genus Caraipa; the timber of this tree
n
The fruit of this tree, more commonly known as star fruit.
n
Any tree of the genus Carapa.
n
An Australian eucalyptus (Eucalyptus tessellaris)
n
An evergreen shrub or tree, Ceratonia siliqua, native to the Mediterranean region.
n
Any of numerous trees, of the genera Casuarina and Allocasuarina, having segmented needle-like leaves; especially the ironwood and beefwood; she-oak.
n
Martynia annua, a plant species endemic to Brazil
n
Catalpa bignonioides; the southern catalpa, a deciduous tree of family Bignoniaceae growing in Southeastern U.S., which is the host plant for the catawba worms, caterpillars that are popular fishing bait.
n
Zelkova carpinifolia, a species of tree in the genus Zelkova.
n
(uncommon) A South American tree (Anadenanthera colubrina), the bark of which contains tannin and is used in tanning hides.
n
A fiber from the leaves of Agave cantala.
n
Any tree of the genus Ceiba, the best-known of which is Ceiba pentandra.
n
The tree Erythrina crista-galli.
n
The Swiss pine, Pinus cembra.
n
Astrocaryum chambira, a type of palm native to the Amazon rainforest, or the wood of this tree.
n
a kind of tree (Colophospermum mopane)
n
Nauclea orientalis (Leichhardt tree, yellow cheesewood, Canary cheesewood).
n
A species of tree, Artocarpus integer.
n
A species of plant, Embothrium coccineum, found in South America.
n
The edible pine nut of Pinus gerardiana.
n
Bactris speciosa, a South and Central American palm tree from which fiber is obtained.
n
A Himalayan pine, Pinus roxburghii
n
The yellow cottonwood , Populus deltoides.
n
Forest natal-mahogany (Trichilia dregeana)
n
Metrosideros kermadecensis, New Zealand Christmas bush.
n
A tree or shrub of the genus Cinchona, native to the Andes in South America but since widely cultivated in Indonesia and India as well for its medicinal bark.
n
An Australian rainforest tree, Ceratopetalum apetalum, with a straight trunk and a caramel-like fragrance, and greatly prized as a hardwood for its attractive grain.
n
(botany) The fruit of Anamirta cocculus, a climbing plant of Southeast Asia and India. It is a source of picrotoxin.
n
Alternative form of cocowood [A hard wood of the Indian tree Aporosa octandra]
n
A fruit of the tree Chrysobalanus icaco.
n
A hard wood of the Indian tree Aporosa octandra
n
The fragrant resin of the hyawa tree.
n
Acacia saligna, an Australian shrub wattle
n
Alternative spelling of coolibah [Any of a number of eucalyptus trees of central and northern Australia, in particular Eucalyptus microtheca.]
n
Any of several South American trees of the genus Copaifera
n
Adenanthera pavonina, a leguminous tree.
n
Commiphora angolensis or sand corkwood, a shrub species growing mainly in Angola and Namibia.
n
Populus sect. Aigeiros, a taxonomic section of the poplar genus
n
Hymenaea courbaril, a South American tree.
n
Manilkara bidentata, the massaranduba.
n
(botany) Manilkara bidentata, native to Brazil
n
The baobab tree (Adansonia digitata).
n
A Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica
n
Kigelia africana, native to tropical Africa.
n
(India, archaic) The carambola or star fruit.
n
Momordica balsamina (balsam apple), a vine species found in Africa.
n
A tropical fruit tree related to cacao, Thebroma grandiflora, the source of an edible fruit whose seeds can be used like cocoa beans.
n
A spurge, Jatropha curcas, from Central America
n
A tree (Murraya koenigii), related to citrus, native to South Asia and used for flavoring in the local cuisines.
n
Widdringtonia, of Southern Africa
n
Ipomoea quamoclit, a tropical morning glory.
n
(botany) Sarawak olive (Canarium odontophyllum)
n
A timber tree (genus Myristica) of Guiana, whose wood is used for staves etc.
n
Any of various hard resins, obtained especially from evergreen trees, notably of the genera Agathis (family Araucariaceae) and Hopea (family Dipterocarpaceae), native to southeast Asia, also used in varnishes and lacquers.
n
A deciduous timber-yielding tree native to West and West Central Tropical Africa, Nesogordonia papaverifera.
n
A palm tree, Phoenix dactylifera, whose fruit is the date.
n
A tall cedar, Cedrus deodara, native to the western Himalayas.
n
(Australia) Any of several trees of dry parts of Australia, especially Acacia coriacea, Acacia sericophylla, and Allocasuarina decaisneana.
n
A stand of trees in the Amazon rainforest consisting almost exclusively of a single species, Duroia hirsuta, and created by lemon ants, which nest in these trees and systematically poison other plants.
n
A tree (Cartrema americana, syn. Osmanthus americanus), allied to the European olive.
n
An evergreen arctic shrub, Diapensia lapponica.
n
Bark of the tropical blackboard tree (Alstonia scholaris).
n
Caesalpinia coriaria, a leguminous tree of the southern Western Hemisphere
n
A tree native to Mauritius, Sideroxylon grandiflorum.
n
The tree Nothofagus dombeyi native to southern South America
n
An evergreen conifer of genus Pseudotsuga; there are four to six species native to western North America and eastern Asia.
n
Alternative spelling of dragon fruit [The fruit of certain cacti of the genus Hylocereus, cultivated in Southeast Asia and Central and South America, having cerise-pink- or yellow-coloured skin and a white or pink sweet fleshy interior with black seeds.]
n
(South Asia, Myanmar) The moringa or drumstick tree, Moringa oleifera, especially its slender, cylindrical pods.
n
(very rare) Transformation into duramen (heartwood).
n
Any of several trees, genus Durio, of Southeast Asia.
n
A large pine tree native to eastern North America, Pinus strobus.
n
The hard timber of the tree Lophira alata.
n
(obsolete) Trichilia emetica, an Arabian tree whose fruit is an emetic.
n
A tree, Canarium luzonicum, native to the Philippines.
n
other Dillenia species such as the katmon
n
A distinctive shrub or small tree native to northern Mexico and the farthest southern edge of California and Arizona, Bursera microphylla, having a smooth-skinned, bulging round trunk reminiscent of an elephant's trunk or legs.
n
(US) The soft, spongy wood of Magnolia umbrella.
n
A deciduous tree, Paulownia tomentosa
n
Picea engelmannii, a spruce native to western North America.
n
The flowering tree Litsea garciae.
n
A tree, Ekebergia capensis, the Cape ash.
n
Any tree of the tribe Eucalypteae of genera related and similar to Eucalyptus, such as Corymbia and Angophora.
n
A deciduous tree, Robinia pseudoacacia, native to the United States; the black locust
n
Myoporum sandwicense, a flowering tree or shrub in the figwort family endemic to Hawai'i, highly variable in its form, the size and shape of its leaves, in the number of flowers in a group and in the shape of its fruit.
n
A South American evergreen shrub, Acca sellowiana (syn. Feijoa sellowiana).
n
Any plant now or formerly in the genus Podocarpus
n
An acacia tree, Vachellia xanthophloea, native to eastern and southern Africa, with fragrant yellow flowers.
n
(Australia) An Australian rainforest tree grown as an ornamental for its bright red flowers, Stenocarpus sinuatus
n
Butea monosperma (syn. Butea frondosa), of south Asia; palash, bastard teak.
n
The bush (genus Phormium) bearing New Zealand flax.
n
The tree Albizia lebbeck.
n
(Australia) The flooded gum, Eucalyptus rudis.
n
A species of pine tree (Pinus sabiniana).
n
Forest natal-mahogany (Trichilia dregeana)
n
Allocasuarina torulosa, an Australian tree which grows in sub-rainforest areas.
n
(Zambia, Zimbabwe) Mussaenda arcuata, a shrub species of the family Rubiaceae with a star-shaped 5-lobed yellow corolla, whose centre is also star-shaped and hairy, orange to brown in colour; native range is Tropical Africa and Western Indian Ocean.
n
A European tree, Eurasian smoketree, Cotinus coggygria, whose wood produces an orange dye.
n
One of several species of trees of the genus Garcinia found in South and Southeastern Asia, especially Garcinia xanthochymus.
n
Wikstroemia pauciflora (sakura ganpi)
n
A tropical tree of the genus Garcinia, including the mangosteen and the gamboge tree.
n
Broad-leaved yellowwood, Podocarpus latifolius, or any other Podocarpus tree.
n
The fruit of this tree, oval in shape, as a large as a small orange, of a pale greenish color, and with dark purple juice.
n
The tree Sequoiadendron giganteum, the world's largest species of tree.
n
A native Australian tree, Xanthostemon chrysanthus, family Myrtaceae, of north Queensland, having large yellow flowers.
n
Alternative form of gumihan [(Philippines) The tropical evergreen tree Artocarpus sericicarpus.]
n
The edible fruit of these plants. Alternative regional spelling grenadilla
n
A species of pine tree (Pinus sabiniana).
n
A type of tree (Chlorocardium rodiei) native to Guyana.
n
A species of tree found in Africa, Dalbergia melanoxylon, valued for its timber.
n
A variety of the Monterey pine, Pinus radiata var. binata.
n
Synonym of courbaril (“South American tree”)
n
A tree, Paullinia cupana, native to Venezuela and northern Brazil.
n
A tropical tree or shrub of the myrtle family, Psidium guajava.
n
Myrciaria floribunda, a Caribbean fruit tree.
n
The pineapple guava or feijoa.
n
(uncommon) The guava (tree or fruit).
n
Any of various trees in the genus Handroanthus, which typically have strong, hard wood.
n
The edible fruit of this tree.
n
Shorea guiso, a species of dipterocarp native to parts of Southeast Asia.
n
Parinari excelsa, a plant in the family Chrysobalanaceae, found in African mountains.
n
Eucalyptus intertexta, the inland red box or western red box, a tree native to Australia.
n
A eucalyptus tree, including trees now placed in the genera Angophora and Corymbia.
n
(Australia) A shrub or small tree, Pittosporum angustifolium, growing in inland Australia, used by Aboriginal peoples for food and medicine.
n
(Philippines) The tropical evergreen tree Artocarpus sericicarpus.
n
Alternative spelling of gum tree [A eucalyptus tree, including trees now placed in the genera Angophora and Corymbia.]
n
A major commercial timber species in the genus Dipterocarpus.
n
An inferior, whitish or reddish gutta-percha from the tree Palaquium leiocarpum.
n
The tree Balanites aegyptiaca, from which zachun is derived.
n
A shrub of the genus Hakea.
n
Pandanus tectorius, a screw pine native to Malesia, eastern Australia, and the Pacific Islands.
n
A variety of muskmelon from Xinjiang, China, particularly associated with Hami City.
n
Alstonia spatulata (also Siamese balsa)
n
An Asian ornamental shrub in the family Berberidaceae, with foliage and unbranched stems that look somewhat like one of the smaller bamboos, Nandina domestica.
n
A group of mainly alpine shrubs, of approximately 200 species, found mainly in New Zealand.
n
An evergreen shrub or tree, Chamaecyparis obtusa.
n
Araucaria cunninghamii, a tree of eastern Australia and New Guinea.
n
An economically useful tree, Moringa oleifera, probably native to India, but grown throughout the tropics.
n
A pine tree, Pinus massoniana, native to a wide area of central and southern China, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, and northern Vietnam.
n
A West Indian mimosoid tree, Zygia latifolia, with showy crimson blossoms.
n
A fragrant balsam obtained from Brazilian trees of the genus Humiria.
n
Lagarostrobos franklinii, a conifer native to the wet southwestern corner of Tasmania, Australia; not a true pine.
n
The aromatic gum of this tree.
n
The wood of a tropical tree Haematoxylon brasiletto (found in Nicaragua); a red dye extracted from it
n
Tabernanthe iboga, a perennial rainforest shrub and a source of the hallucinogen ibogaine.
n
Terminalia ivorensis, a combretaceous timber-yielding African tree.
n
A Philippine and Pacific island tree (Intsia bijuga) yielding a valuable brown dye and having a very hard and durable dark wood.
n
A Central American fruit related to the cherimoya, Annona diversifolia.
n
Any tree of the genus Cecropia.
n
Ocotea porosa, a tree of southern Brazil, a source of high-end timber.
n
A South American liana, Philodendron imbe.
n
(Jamaica) Chrysobalanus icaco, a tree related to the plums.
n
A tropical tree grown for its edible fruit, almondlike nuts, and as an ornamental shade tree, Terminalia catappa.
n
A tree, Erythrina variegata, native to the tropical and subtropical regions of eastern Africa, the Indian Subcontinent, northern Australia, and the islands of the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean east to Fiji.
n
Ficus benghalensis, a species of banyan tree also known as East Indian fig.
n
neem tree (Azadirachta indica)
n
Rubia cordifolia (munjeet), now widely distributed at tropical and subtropical latitudes in eastern and southern Africa and Asia, growing at elevations up to 3,500 meters.
n
Toona ciliata, native from southern Asia to Australia; also known as toon, Australian redcedar, or Indian cedar
n
Flacourtia jangomas, a rainforest tree in the willow family that is widely planted in Asia and Southeast Asia.
n
A species of sandalwood (Santalum album) the most commonly known source of sandalwood.
n
The Monterey pine (Pinus radiata, syn. Pinus insignis).
n
The Monterey pine, Pinus radiata.
n
(medicine, pharmaceutics) The flowering plant Carapichea ipecacuanha.
n
A hardwood obtained from several African trees, especially of the species Milicia excelsa.
n
(Australia) Any of various eucalypts of eastern Australia known for their hard wood.
n
(Australia) Acacia esthrophiolata, Acacia excelsa, Acacia melanoxylon, Acacia stenophylla, or Erythrophleum chlorostachys.
n
Amburana cearensis, used to produce timber.
n
A kind of palm tree (Mauritia flexuosa), growing near the Orinoco.
n
Wrightia tinctoria, a flowering plant with hard white wood resembling ivory.
n
Any of several species of the genus Pilocarpus of plants, some of which are important medicinally.
n
The evergreen Brazilian grape tree, Myrciaria cauliflora, a fruit-bearing tree native to Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay.
n
The hard, dark wood of these trees.
n
The edible fruit of the Asian tree (Artocarpus heterophyllus); also the tree itself.
n
Diospyros mespiliformis, a large dioecious evergreen tree found mostly in the savannas of Africa.
n
A tree, Artocarpus heterophyllus, of the Moraceae family, which produces edible fruit.
n
Cryptocarya glaucescens, a rainforest tree of eastern Australia whose bark is dark brown or reddish-brown and often scaly.
n
Alternative form of jackwood [Cryptocarya glaucescens, a rainforest tree of eastern Australia whose bark is dark brown or reddish-brown and often scaly.]
n
Syzygium cumini, a myrtaceous tree of the West Indies and tropical America with astringent bark and edible fruit.
n
An evergreen tropical tree, Syzygium cumini.
n
An evergreen shrub, Fatsia japonica, native to Japan.
n
A species of conifer, Cryptomeria japonica, which is the only species of the genus Cryptomeria.
n
Chamaecyparis obtusa, hinoki cypress
n
The loquat. Eriobotrya japonica, which was formerly thought to be closely related to the medlar
n
A Japanese conifer related to yew, Torreya nucifera.
n
A species of camellia, Camellia japonica.
n
Eucalyptus marginata, a eucalypt tree occurring in the southwest of Western Australia, or its wood.
n
Courbaril, a South American tree, Hymenaea courbaril
n
Dyera costulata, a tree of the oleander subfamily.
n
A Chinese hardwood with a grain that resembles a bird's feathers.
n
A kind of tropical hardwood. Malpighia obovata.
n
A small shrub, Ziziphus joazeiro, of the buckthorn family, native to Brazil.
n
(India) A tree of the genus Tetrameles.
n
(India) The flowering tree Bauhinia variegata.
n
(South Africa, now offensive) coral tree, especially Erythrina caffra
n
(New Zealand) Libocedrus bidwillii, the New Zealand cedar, an evergreen coniferous tree.
n
(South Africa) The tree Pterocarpus angolensis (bloodwood).
n
The wood of Neonauclea calycina.
n
(Philippines) Palaquium luzoniense, a sapotaceous plant.
n
A fast-growing tree found in the tropics (Pithecolobium dulce) whose bark is used in tanning.
n
A New Zealand tree Weinmannia racemosa
n
Kunzea ericoides, the white tea tree of Australia and New Zealand, which can grow at high altitudes and in close proximity to geothermal features such as fumaroles.
n
The cotton tree, Malabar silk-cotton tree, or red silk-cotton tree (Bombax ceiba).
n
Cochlospermum gillivraei
n
An evergreen tree, Corynocarpus laevigatus, the New Zealand laurel.
n
The shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa).
n
The tree Eucalyptus diversicolor, native to south-western Western Australia.
n
Dillenia philippinensis, a tree endemic to the Philippines. Its fruit is the elephant apple.
n
A conifer of the genus Agathis, family Araucariaceae, found in Australasia and Melanesia.
n
The fruit of Dovyalis caffra, a tree native to southern Africa.
n
A Malaysian tree Koompassia malaccensis; the hardwood of this tree
n
A hardwood timber from Malaysia and Indonesia
n
(South Africa) A species of tree, Virgilia oroboides, noted for its pretty lilac flowers.
n
An Asian tree, Zelkova serrata.
n
The tree Senegalia catechu from which cutch is obtained
n
Any tree of the genus Khaya.
n
A plant native to the Pacific islands and China (Cordyline fruticosa); ti.
n
Prosopis pallida, a species of mesquite tree.
n
Freycinetia banksii, a high-climbing shrub of New Zealand.
n
A tree native to South Asia, Vachellia nilotica, formerly Acacia arabica var nilotica.
n
A species of evergreen conifer native to Tasmania, Athrotaxis selaginoides.
n
A phlobaphene present in the gum of the kino tree
n
Senegalia nigrescens, a deciduous African tree found in savanna regions.
n
Synonym of kohuhu (“the tree Pittosporum tenuifolium”)
n
Nephelium hypoleucum, a tropical tree of the Sapindaceae family.
n
A tree, Mitragyna speciosa, endemic to Southeast Asia.
n
An African tree, Pseudolachnostylis maprouneifolia.
n
(Hawaii) Aleurites moluccana, the candlenut tree.
n
The Caribbean tree Lagetta lagetto.
n
The lacebark tree, Lagetta lagetto.
n
Alternative form of lakawood [A reddish aromatic heartwood obtained from various plants and used as incense in China, India and South East Asia. It was also historically used as a dye and in medicine.]
n
The gigantic sugar pine of California and Oregon (Pinus lambertiana).
n
New Zealand trees in the genus Pseudopanax.
n
The tree Bruguiera parviflora.
n
A herbal tea made from the inner bark of the tree Handroanthus impetiginosus.
n
Any of three species of Australian eucalypts, Eucalyptus ochrophloia, Eucalyptus thozetiana and Eucalyptus argophloia.
n
A type of citrus tree from Curaçao
n
Pandanus tectorius, a tree common in Hawaii, also known as the screwpine.
n
(Australia, New Zealand) Any of various chiefly climbing plants of coastal Australia, especially of the genus Calamus, with strong curved hooks.
n
A southern African tree with exceptionally hard and dense wood, Combretum imberbe
n
Any subalpine shrub or small tree found only in New Zealand, Olearia colensoi
n
(South Africa) Ochna pulchra, a small deciduous southern African tree.
n
The wood of the tree Brosimum guianense, marked with black spots resembling hieroglyphics.
n
The American hophornbeam, Ostrya virginiana, a small tree with very tough wood.
n
The fragrant wood of several shrubs and trees, especially of species Convolvulus scoparius and Convolvulus floridus (Convolvulaceae) from the Canary Islands, and of the West Indian Amyris balsamifera (Rutaceae).
n
A large African tree, Terminalia superba, whose hard wood is used for furniture, table tennis paddles and musical instruments.
n
The shrub Bixa orellana, which is native to Mexico and northern South America; the arils covering its seeds are a source of the orange-red colourant annatto, and the ground seeds are used in traditional Caribbean, Central American, and South American cuisine.
n
Loblolly pine, Pinus taeda.
n
An elegant white-flowered evergreen shrub or small tree, Gordonia lasianthus, growing in the maritime parts of the Southern United States. Its bark is sometimes used in tanning.
n
(countable) A pine tree, Pinus taeda, native to the southeastern US and extensively planted.
n
Any of several West Indian trees with more or less leathery foliage, but otherwise dissimilar, such as Pisonia subcordata, Cordia alba, and Cupania glabra.
n
(less common) An African locust bean tree (Parkia biglobosa).
n
The fruit from the longan tree.
n
A longleaf pine, Pinus palustris, or the wood of this tree
n
An important pine species of the southeastern US, Pinus palustris.
n
Diospyros lotus, date plum or Caucasian persimmon.
n
The wood from this tree, commercially sold as Philippine mahogany
n
Capparis masaikai, a plant that grows in the subtropical region of the Yunnan province of China and whose mature seeds are used in traditional Chinese medicine.
n
A kind of persimmon tree (Diospyros blancoi) from the Philippine Islands, now introduced into the East and West Indies.
n
Any of various hardwood trees of the Philippines.
n
An evergreen tree, of the genus Macadamia, native to Australia and cultivated in Hawaii.
n
The palm tree Acrocomia aculeata.
n
(New Zealand) The Monterey cypress, Cupressus macrocarpa.
n
Timber bamboo (Phyllostachys bambusoides)
n
A West Indian leguminous tree (Lysiloma latisiliquum) whose wood is used for boat trimming.
n
The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo).
n
The tree Trichilia emitica.
n
Thespesia grandiflora, a tree native to Puerto Rico also planted elsewhere for its fairness and the working properties of its wood.
n
A West Indian tree, Comocladia pinnatifolia, with purplish drupes. The sap of the tree is glutinous, and gives a persistent black stain.
n
Shorea assamica, a tree of India.
n
The foxnut or gorgon nut (Euryale ferox)
n
A yellowish aromatic bark, used in medicine and perfumery, said to be from the South American shrub Croton malambo.
n
The evergreen tree Mammea americana, or its edible fruit
n
The small, green, tangy, oval fruit of the mamoncillo tree.
n
A tropical American tree, Hippomane mancinella, having apple-like, highly poisonous fruit, and a sap that causes blisters on contact with the skin.
n
Litsea calicaris, a species of evergreen tree endemic to New Zealand.
n
The tree Xanthostemon verdugonianus.
n
(more specifically) A tropical fruit of the tree Garcinia mangostana.
n
The galls of the Aleppo oak.
n
An ash tree, Fraxinus ornus, native to southern Europe.
n
Any of various eucalyptus trees that exude manna, especially Eucalyptus viminalis, found in Australia.
n
(uncountable) The wood of this plant.
n
The Australian tree Acacia bakeri.
n
A pine tree (Pinus pinaster), native to the western Mediterranean region.
n
(Australia) Any of various small eucalypts of southwest Australia.
n
A medium-sized dioecious tree, Sclerocarya birrea, indigenous to Southern Africa and West Africa.
n
Alternative form of massaranduba [A tropical hardwood tree, Manilkara bidentata.]
n
A coniferous tree, Prumnopitys taxifolia, endemic to New Zealand.
n
A tree native to South America, Maytenus boaria
n
(South Africa) The milkwood tree.
n
(Australia) Any of various eucalypts with rough bark, specifically Eucalyptus obliqua.
n
Metasequoia, the dawn redwood, a fast-growing deciduous conifer native to China.
n
(South Asia, Australia) Alstonia scholaris (scholar tree, milky pine), and other species in the genus Alstonia.
n
A palm tree, Deckenia nobilis.
n
Acacia cyperophylla, a fabaceous tree of Australia.
n
Any tree of the genus Brachystegia.
n
The portia tree Thespesia populnea, of dark, durable, attractive wood.
n
Alternative form of myrobalan [A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself.]
n
A Southeast-Asian fig that grows as a shrub or small tree, Ficus deltoides
n
Baillonella toxisperma, a species of tree found throughout subtropical forests of Africa, used for its oil.
n
Parinari curatellifolia, an evergreen tropical tree of Africa.
n
(South Africa) Mimusops zeyheri, the milkwood.
n
The purple fruit of these trees
n
A deciduous shrub growing on Haiti, Trichilia hirta (red cedar).
n
Japanese maple (Acer palmatum)
n
Populus suaveolens, a species of poplar found in Mongolia, Korea, and Japan.
n
A large, spreading tree of the family Euphorbiaceae, found on wooded hills and among sand dunes, with distinctive hand-shaped leaves, whose pale yellow wood resembles balsa.
n
Any of numerous tropical trees in the genus Lecythis, mostly with edible nuts.
n
A large coniferous tree, Araucaria araucana, native to Chile.
n
Albizia saman, a flowering tree in the pea family, native to the neotropics.
n
Manoao colensoi, a native conifer of New Zealand.
n
Leatherwood (genus Dirca or specifically Dirca palustris)
n
A tree, Colophospermum mopane, native to southern Africa.
n
A large Australian tree with showy flowers and poisonous seeds, prized for its dense, attractive wood, Castanospermum australe.
n
An Australian banyan tree grown in milder climates for its large size and beautiful form, Ficus macrophylla.
n
The shepherd tree or shepherd's tree (Boscia albitrunca), an evergreen tree native to southern and tropical Africa which is one of the most important forage trees of the Kalahari.
n
(Botswana) The tree Combretum imberbe or its wood; leadwood.
n
A tree native to southeastern Australia, Eucalyptus regnans, the tallest of all flowering plants.
n
Ximenia americana, a tree of the tropics bearing cherished fruits.
n
(India) A sweet lime (citrus), Citrus limetta.
n
(Zambia, Malawi) Transvaal teak, the timber tree Pterocarpus angolensis, or its substitute of comparable properties Pterocarpus tinctorius syn. Pterocarpus chrysothrix
n
The wood of an Australian tree (Olearia argophylla).
n
A close-grained, heavy wood from Brazil, used in turning, for making the handles of tools, etc.
n
The tree Eucalyptus stellulata.
n
Milicia excelsa, a tropical African tree yielding iroko wood.
n
Any of various Australian acacias, especially the weeping myall, Acacia pendula, or the wood of such trees.
n
Alternative form of myrobalan [A plum-like fruit from various trees of the genus Terminalia, formerly used in medicine and now in the dyeing industry; also, the tree itself.]
n
wood of the tree Phoebe nanmu (or several other similar) that was once used for boat building, architectural woodworking and wood art in China
n
Eucalyptus angustissima, a species of mallee eucalyptus tree.
n
A tree (Trichilia emetica) found in southern and tropical Africa.
n
Paliurus spina-christi, a deciduous shrub or small tree native to the Mediterranean region and southwest and central Asia.
n
Azadirachta indica, a large, mostly evergreen tree from India, whose seeds yield the insecticide azadirachtin.
n
An evergreen tree, Myoporum laetum, native to New Zealand.
n
The Asian palm tree Oncosperma tigillarium.
n
(New Zealand) Rhopalostylis sapida, a palm tree of New Zealand.
n
The sapodilla, Manilkara zapota.
n
The hardwood of Handroanthus serratifolius.
n
The Polynesian fruit tree Morinda citrifolia.
n
Synonym of Norfolk Island pine
n
A species of spruce native to Europe and naturalized in temperate northeastern North America, Picea abies.
n
Triplochiton scleroxylon, a tropical tree of Africa.
n
Synonym of mvule (“the tree Milicia excelsa”)
n
An African tree, Pentaclethra macrophylla.
n
Aucoumea klaineana, an African hardwood.
n
The wood of Diospyros ebenum (syn. Diospyros ebenaster), a kind of ebony found in Ceylon.
n
Synonym of bilinga (tropical hardwood)
n
The popinac or opopanax tree (Acacia farnesiana, syn. Vachellia farnesiana), an acacia of America.
n
An Australian tree, Angophora lanceolata.
n
The plant Buddleja globosa and the medicinal infusion made from it, it is native to Chile and Argentina
n
A deciduous tree of the African savanna, 1.8-15 m tall, with a rounded crown and pendulous branchlets (Crossopteryx febrifuga).
n
The California laurel (Umbellularia californica), especially when referring to the wood.
n
The flowering tree Syzygium malaccense.
n
A flowering evergreen tree of southeastern Asia, Dillenia indica, bearing edible fruits.
n
Abies religiosa, the sacred fir, an evergreen coniferous tree of South America with needle-like leaves.
n
A large tree of the mimosa family, Enterolobium contortisiliquum, which yields wood good for carpentry.
n
Any of several primitive tropical trees that have a thick stem and few or no branches.
n
A thick rhizome of bamboo
n
Any of the trees of the pantropical genus Pterocarpus.
n
The light elastic wood of Aspidosperma excelsum, a South American tree whose trunk is readily split into planks.
n
Alternative form of pohutukawa [A coastal evergreen tree, Metrosideros excelsa, native to New Zealand and producing a brilliant display of red flowers made up of a mass of stamens around Christmastime.]
n
A western American hackberry (Celtis reticulata) with light-coloured bark.
n
The African tree Millettia stuhlmannii, or its wood.
n
A South American pine-like conifer with edible nuts and valuable wood, Araucaria angustifolia
n
Firmiana simplex, a plant in the Malvaceae family, native to Asia.
n
Chondrodendron tomentosum, a large tropical liana native to Central and South America, and a source of tubocurare.
n
A hard variegated wood from Brazil and the West Indies, used in cabinet-work.
n
Hevea brasiliensis, the rubber tree.
n
A plant, passiflora, that produces an edible fruit.
n
A species of tree, Fitzroya cupressoides, the largest found in South America.
n
A palm tree of the genus Iriartea.
n
A tree of the species Sterculia quadrifida; a red- or orange-fruited kurrajong.
n
The edible fruit of the tropical peach palm (Bactris gasipaes), a single-seeded drupe; a peewah.
n
Athrotaxis cupressoides, a tree native to Tasmania.
n
New Zealand native shrubs Pseudowintera axillaris and Pseudowintera colorata with leaves often having large red blotches and are used for traditional medicines. Flowers greenish yellow and fruit orange-red or black.
n
(chiefly Australia) Any of several species of eucalypt which yield an essential oil that smells of peppermint, especially a member of the stringybark group.
n
The fruit of such trees, pequi nut.
n
A hard, reddish wood of a tree of the tribe Caesalpinieae, often used as dyewood; especially Paubrasilia echinata, used to make violin bows.
n
Synonym of mangkono (Xanthostemon verdugonianus).
n
An evergreen tree, Trema orientalis, which is widely distributed throughout much of the tropics.
n
A tropical tree, Canarium ovatum, native to maritime Southeast Asia, New Guinea and northern Australia, and cultivated in the Philippines for its nuts.
n
A spine from the trunk of various Caribbean palm trees.
n
The tree Quercus palustris.
n
A palm of the genus Nenga, endemic to Southeast Asia.
n
An adult leaf of an adult pine tree.
n
(slang) A fan of American actor Chris Pine (born 1980).
n
Any coniferous tree in the genus Pinus
n
An Australian tree (Lophostemon confertus)
n
Pinus caribaea (Caribbean pine)
n
Eugenia luschnathiana, an evergreen shrub of Brazil.
n
A tree native to Florida and throughout the New World tropics, Annona glabra.
n
A very large species of pine tree native to western North America, Pinus ponderosa.
n
Alsophila dealbata (=Cyathea dealbata), a medium-sized tree fern endemic to New Zealand.
n
Quintinia sieberi, a rainforest tree native to eastern Australia.
n
Synonym of black locust (“tree”), robinia
n
The fruit of the tropical tree Nephelium ramboutan-ake (syn. N. mutabile)
n
A tropical tree of the genus Cecropia.
n
(Philippines) The plant Amorphophallus paeoniifolius.
n
Any of several trees, of the genus Calophyllum, from parts of India and Malaysia
n
Vitex lucens, an evergreen tree endemic to New Zealand.
n
A large tropical tree, of the genus Peltogyne, native to parts of South America and the West Indies
n
Burmese ironwood, Xylia xylocarpa
n
Synonym of Brazilian firetree
n
Alternative form of quandong [A small southern Australian shrub (Santalum acuminatum) or its edible red fruit.]
n
mountain quandong (Elaeocarpus holopetalus )
n
the wood from these trees
n
The bark of these trees, formerly used in treating fever.
n
The black oak tree, Quercus velutina, indigenous to North America.
n
The European rowan tree.
n
An extract from the bark of the soapbark tree, Quillaja saponaria, used as a food additive.
n
The soapbark tree, Quillaja saponaria; the bark of this tree used as a source of saponin
n
The tough wood of Platymiscium pinnatum.
n
The South American tree Sideroxylon obtusifolium.
n
Pyrularia pubera, a shrub in the sandalwood family.
n
The Monterey pine. Pinus radiata.
n
Philenoptera violacea (apple-leaf), native to Africa.
n
A tree of the species Eucalyptus deglupta with striking coloured streaks on its bark, native to New Guinea, Mindanao, and islands off Southeast Asia.
n
The colourful wood of the extinct conifer Araucarioxylon arizonicum.
n
Alternative form of rain tree [A tropical American tree (Albizia saman) having bipinnate leaves, globose clusters of flowers with crimson stamens, and sweet-pulp pods eaten by cattle, also used as an ornamental.]
n
The tree Ficus elastica.
n
A Brazilian palm tree (Socratea exorrhiza) which has strong aerial roots like a screw pine. The roots have a hard, rough surface, and are used by the natives for graters and rasps.
n
The yellow mangosteen, Garcinia dulcis, a tree native to Indonesia, the Philippines, and India.
n
Nothofagus alpina, a deciduous tree of Chile and Argentina.
n
Syzygium ingens, an Australian tree.
n
Forest natal-mahogany (Trichilia dregeana)
n
An evergreen tree of the mahogany family with reddish wood, found in Australia, Toona australis.
n
Abies magnifica, a western North American fir tree.
n
Eucalyptus tereticornis (forest red gum), with red wood.
n
A Caribbean tree, Pouteria hotteana, of the sapote family.
n
(usually countable, Australia) Carnarvonia araliifolia, a rainforest tree from Australia.
n
The tree Pterocarpus santalinus or its reddish heartwood, which is highly valued in woodworking and has been used as a dye as well as a traditional herbal medicine.
n
Carnarvonia araliifolia, of Australia
n
(Australia) Suaeda australis (austral seablite)
n
(New Zealand) Knightia excelsa, an evergreen tree of New Zealand, with leathery leaves and red flowers.
n
(Australia) Any of various eucalypts whose bark peels off in ribbons, especially the manna gum, Eucalyptus viminalis.
n
A large evergreen conifer native to New Zealand, Dacrydium cupressinum.
n
(Australia) The red gum tree, Eucalyptus camaldulensis (syn. E. rostrata Schltdl., nom. illeg.).
n
Syzygium malaccense, the Malay rose apple.
n
Robinia hispida, a shrub in the subfamily Faboideae of the pea family Fabaceae, native to the southeastern United States.
n
The fragrant wood of Dalbergia nigra, a Brazilian tree in the legume family, which has a sweet smell.
n
A tropical tree, Delonix regia, grown for its bright red flower clusters; native to Madagascar but grown in many other tropical regions; the flamboyant
n
Ficus elastica, a tropical tree used as a houseplant native to Asia.
n
Cryptostegia grandiflora, a woody perennial vine native to south-west Madagascar.
n
Microbiota decussata, an evergreen coniferous shrub.
n
A variety of kiwi fruit.
n
The split or hollowed trunk of a bonsai tree, for example to suggest a lightning strike.
n
the hard dark wood of the sabicu tree, which resembles mahogany in texture
n
rock cedar (Juniperus ashei)
n
A tree of the species Cinnamomum loureiroi.
n
The pear-shaped fruit of this palm; also called snake fruit.
n
The salak (Salacca zalacca).
n
The ginkgo tree (Ginkgo biloba, or Salisburia adiantifolia).
n
(Australia) Any of various wattles (trees).
n
(Australia) Any of various Australian acacias, especially Acacia longifolia of southeastern Australia and Tasmania.
n
The aromatic heartwood of these trees used in ornamental carving, in the construction of insect-repellent boxes and chests, and as a source of certain perfumes.
n
Any tree from the genus Tetraclinis.
n
A tropical Asian tree, Sandoricum koetjape.
n
Alternative form of sapodilla [Manilkara zapota, a long-lived evergreen tree native to the New World tropics.]
n
A wood producing a red dye, usually species Caesalpinia sappan.
n
Entandrophragma cylindricum, a large tree native to tropical Africa.
n
Sapote, the similar fruit of various other tropical and semi-tropical trees, such as Pouteria sapota.
n
(rare) Obsolete form of sassywood. [A form of trial by ordeal in Liberia, typically involving a suspect drinking a poisonous concoction made from the bark of the ordeal tree Erythrophleum guineense, Erythrophleum ivorense, or Erythrophleum suaveolens (called sassy bark); by extension, other forms of trial by ordeal such as applying a heated machete to the suspect's legs, or dipping the suspect's hand into hot oil.]
n
The ordeal tree itself, the bark of which is used in the sassywood procedure.
n
Chrysophyllum oliviforme, a medium-sized tree native to Florida, the Bahamas, the Greater Antilles, and Belize.
n
Chloroxylon swietenia (Ceylon or East Indian satinwood)
n
A large African tree with fruits that look like sausages, Kigelia africana.
n
The eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America.
n
A West Indian tree whose bark can serve as soap.
n
(Australia) A tree from which a section of bark has been removed for traditional Indigenous activities such as canoe making, the construction of shelters, etc.
n
Pinus sylvestris, an evergreen of wide distribution in Eurasia in northern or mountainous areas.
n
(US) Pinus sylvestris, an evergreen of wide distribution in Eurasia in northern or mountainous areas.
n
Pinus sylvestris, an evergreen of wide distribution in Eurasia in northern or mountainous areas.
n
Any species in the genus Pandanus
n
A tall tree, Paraserianthes falcataria, native to the Moluccas, New Guinea, and the Solomons, but widely cultivated elsewhere for its timber.
n
Sequoia sempervirens, a coniferous evergreen tree, the only living species of the genus Sequoia.
n
A rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis).
n
A rubiaceous shrub (Genipa clusiifolia) growing in the West Indies.
n
The elongated fruit of this tree.
n
A tree (Vitellaria paradoxa) indigenous to Africa, occurring in Mali, Cameroon, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Togo, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Uganda.
n
The wood of the tree Dalbergia sissoo.
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A lodgepole pine, Pinus contorta.
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an Asiatic leguminous tree (Albizia julibrissin) with finely bipinnate leaves, and large flat pods; so called because of the abundant long silky stamens of its blossoms.
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Alternative form of silk tree [an Asiatic leguminous tree (Albizia julibrissin) with finely bipinnate leaves, and large flat pods; so called because of the abundant long silky stamens of its blossoms.]
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A European silver fir (Abies alba), native to Europe.
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A tree (Manoao colensoi) endemic to New Zealand.
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The Engelmann spruce, Picea engelmannii
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Corymbia collina, a species of bloodwood tree native to Australia.
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A small tree with blue-grey foliage, Eucalyptus melanophloia, of Queensland and northern New South Wales.
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A fir tree (Abies magnifica).
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A tree, Bombax ceiba, native to much of tropical and temperate Asia and Australasia.
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Any tree of the genus Albizia.
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The dark brown compact and durable timber obtained from this tree.
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Sterculia foetida, a toxic, malodorous tree of Africa, Southeast Asia, Australia, and Hawaii.
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Brosimum guianense (family Rosaceae), an Amazonian tree having hard, speckled wood that resembles snakeskin; used in musical instruments.
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The wood of a South African tree, Ptaeroxylon obliquum.
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Acacia concinna, also known as shikakai
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The bark of the evergreen tree, Quillaja saponaria, which when pulverised forms a lather with water.
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The plant Yucca elata, which has a substance in its roots and trunk rich in saponins.
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Any of various plants of the genus Daphnandra, native to Australia.
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Nyssa sylvatica (black tupelo)
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A small tropical evergreen tree, Annona muricata.
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An Australian tree, of the genus Hibiscus; the sorrel tree.
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Pinus palustris, longleaf pine.
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The plum-like fruit of the West Indian tree Chrysobalanus icaco; the cocoplum.
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(Australia) The eucalypt Eucalyptus doratoxylon.
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Trichilia havanensis, a Caribbean softwood.
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A tall species of gum tree with smooth spotted bark, Corymbia maculata, of eastern Australia.
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A species of pine (Pinus glabra).
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A tropical tree, Chrysophyllum cainito.
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The fruit of the carambola tree, Averrhoa carambola.
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A species of mangrove, Sonneratia alba, native to the tropics and subtropics of east Africa, Asia, Australasia, and the western Pacific.
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Alternative spelling of star fruit [The fruit of the carambola tree, Averrhoa carambola.]
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Simaruba amara, a tall tree of tropical America, one of the trees that yield quassia.
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The California nutmeg tree (Torreya californica).
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(Australia) Synonym of jam (“the tree Acacia acuminata”)
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A species of pine native of southern Europe, Pinus pinea.
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Any of a number of Australian eucalyptus trees with fibrous bark, or the wood or bark of such trees.
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The tree Leucaena leucocephala.
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Pinus lambertiana, the largest species of pine, native to California and Oregon; particularly noted for its huge, distinctive cone.
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The wood of the Japanese cedar, Cryptomeria japonica.
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(botany) Cerbera odollam, a tree native to India and other parts of Southern Asia, yielding a potent poison.
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A tree, Pinus merkusii, native to Sumatra and the Philippines.
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Alternative form of sunder tree [Heritiera fomes (syn. H. minor Roxb.); a tree found in high intertidal regions of Bangladesh (especially in Sundarbans), Myanmar, Thailand, etc., with dark durable timber.]
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Heritiera fomes (syn. H. minor Roxb.); a tree found in high intertidal regions of Bangladesh (especially in Sundarbans), Myanmar, Thailand, etc., with dark durable timber.
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The fruit from this tree.
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A valuable kind of wood obtained from the genus Hieronyma in South America, much used for timbers, rails, wheels, etc.
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Populus heterophylla, native to damp areas of eastern United States.
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any of several Oriental and American trees, of the genus Liquidambar, having brilliant autumn coloration; their wood is used for furniture, woodpulp and plywood
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A tree, Liquidambar styraciflua, found in the southern US.
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Alternative form of sweet gum [any of several Oriental and American trees, of the genus Liquidambar, having brilliant autumn coloration; their wood is used for furniture, woodpulp and plywood]
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The tropical American evergreen tree on which it grows.
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The timber of the Jamaican tree Oreodaphne leucoxylon, or of various related trees.
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A pine tree of the species Pinus cembra, native to alpine Europe, North Africa, and western Asia.
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A pine tree native to the Alps and other mountains of central and eastern Europe, Pinus cembra
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A species of fig, Ficus sycomorus, native to Africa.
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Any eucalypt of the genus Symphyomyrtus
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The fruit of the tagua palm.
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The edible seed of a tropical tree native from Malaysia across the southern Pacific, Inocarpus fagifer.
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(Philippines) The tree Terminalia catappa.
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Detarium microcarpum, an African tree with edible fruit
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Alternative spelling of tallowwood [An Australian eucalyptus, Eucalyptus microcorys, whose wood has a greasy feel when cut]
n
Alternative spelling of tallowwood [An Australian eucalyptus, Eucalyptus microcorys, whose wood has a greasy feel when cut]
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(uncommon, by extension) The tropical fruit-tree genus Ximenia.
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The edible fruit of an East Indian tree (Baccaurea malayana) of the spurge family, somewhat resembling an apple.
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The Australian eucalyptus, Eucalyptus globulus; a tall, straight tree, growing to 70 metres in height and 2 metres in trunk diameter.
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(possibly obsolete) A South American tree, also called the palo amarillo or tatare, which has a piquant juice in its bark used for dyeing, and golden yellow wood good for carpentry.
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A shrub of the sumac family, Rhus taitensis, native to Southeast Asia, Australasia, and the Pacific Islands.
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Pouteria costata, the bastard ironwood.
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On Haiti, the small flowering tree Albizia lebbeck.
n
(archaic) A stick cut from the Australian tea tree.
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The kanuka, Kunzea ericoides.
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(Singapore) A tree Shorea siamensis
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The tree Shorea macrophylla, from Borneo, that has oil-bearing seeds
n
Ulmus crassifolia, a species of elm tree.
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A black varnish obtained from the tree Melanorrhoea usitatissima.
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A toxic Asian shrub in the family Thymelaeaceae, Wikstroemia indica, used as a source of fiber and as a remedy in traditional Chinese medicine.
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The variegated heartwood of a tree (Paramachaerium schomburgkii, syn. Machaerium schomburgkii) found in Guiana.
n
A South American tree also known as goncalo alves, producing a hardwood, with contrasting stripes, Astronium graveolens, Astronium fraxinifolium and possibly other related species.
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A tree of species Tipuana tipu
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A tree of the southern United States (Cliftonia monophylla) having glossy leaves and racemes of fragrant white flowers succeeded by one-seeded drupes.
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A Polynesian tree of the genus Casuarina, or its wood.
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Phyllocladus alpinus (mountain celery pine).
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wood of the toon tree, Toona ciliata
n
The tree Aralia spinosa.
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Other species of genus Podocarpus.
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The gumbo limbo, Bursera simaruba
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The Haitian tree boa, Epicrates gracilis
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Gossypium arboreum, a species of cotton native to India, Pakistan and other tropical and subtropical regions of the Old World.
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Dracophyllum arboreum (Chatham tree heath)
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The Indian almond, Terminalia catappa.
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Eucalyptus gomphocephala, an Australian tree with heavy, durable wood.
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(botany) A Brazilian palm (Astrocaryum tucuma) with edible fruit.
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The fruit of the cactus.
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A melon cactus (Melocactus).
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(Australia) Gardenia pyriformis (malara, native gardenia), native to northern Australia.
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(New Zealand) Any of the genus Coriaria of shrubs and trees found in New Zealand.
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Manicaria saccifera, a palm tree.
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Polyscias murrayi, an Australian rainforest tree.
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Eucalyptus urnigera, a Tasmanian tree with urn-shaped fruit.
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The palm tree Attalea phalerata.
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Eugenia pyriformis, a myrtaceous plant found primarily in Brazil.
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Vangueria madagascariensis, a flowering plant with a large orange edible fruit.
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Madeira mahogany; the coarse, dark wood of Persea indica.
n
Synonym of kingwood (“the wood of Dalbergia cearensis”)
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An Australian tree, Pittosporum bicolor.
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The tough wood of this tree, used for making wagon wheels.
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A leguminous tree (Eperua falcata) of Demerara, with pinnate leaves, reddish-brown wood, and clusters of red flowers.
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A form of rosewood/ebony from Guyana.
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Any of various eucalyptus trees with smooth white bark, especially Eucalyptus wandoo.
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(UK) A large coniferous tree, Sequoiadendron giganteum, from California.
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Aspidosperma excelsum, a tree native to Peru.
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The African flowering tree Heritiera utilis.
n
Elaeocarpus kirtonii (brown-heart quandong, mountain beech, Mowbullan whitewood, pigeonberry ash, silver quandong, white quandong), an Australian rainforest tree.
n
The Mexican white cedar, Cupressus lusitanica
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A North American species of fir tree (Abies concolor).
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Any of numerous Eucalyptus species having smooth white bark.
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A tropical tree native to coastal mangrove habitats on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, Laguncularia racemosa.
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Any species of the subgenus Pinus subg. Strobus
n
A Mexican and Central American fruit tree, Casimiroa edulis
n
Rhodamnia argentea, a rainforest tree of eastern Australia.
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Vachellia constricta, formerly Acacia constricta, whitethorn acacia, a shrub in the family Fabaceae.
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Elaeocarpus obovatus (blueberry-ash), freckled oliveberry, grey carrobean, hard quandong), an Australian rainforest tree
n
a small type of New Zealand tree related to violets - Melicytus ramiflorus
n
Alsophila baileyana, a tree fern native to northeastern Queensland in Australia.
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Irvingia malayana, native to southeast Asia
n
Ochna pulchra, of Africa.
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(South Africa) silver tree
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Alternative form of wodgil (“acacia”) [The plant Acacia neurophylla, a shrub or tree endemic to southwestern Australia.]
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An Australian coniferous tree (Wollemia nobilis) in the family Araucariaceae, not a true pine.
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(Australia) The jujube tree Zizyphus jujuba
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(Australia) Manilkara kauki, a sapotaceous plant with an edible orange-red fruit
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(Australia) Manilkara kauki, a plant in the family Sapotaceae, found in tropical Asia and northern Queensland, Australia.
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(obsolete) An Asian tree, Gardenia jasminoides.
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Bael (Aegle marmelos), a tree native to India.
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(Australia) Any of several types of eucalyptus that have a wooly or stringy bark
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Alternative form of woollybutt [(Australia) Any of several types of eucalyptus that have a wooly or stringy bark]
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A tree of the species Zygophyllum xanthoxylon.
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The wood of the cinnamon tree
n
(Philippines) Shorea astylosa; a tree endemic to the Philippines.
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A type of wood from certain species of trees from the Caribbean in the Annonaceae family.
n
Acacia homalophylla, a species of acacia tree found commonly in Australia.
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Pittosporum revolutum, native to Australia
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A coniferous tree endemic to New Zealand, Halocarpus biformis.
n
Flindersia xanthoxyla, a tall rainforest tree of Australia.
n
Ilex paraguariensis, a plant used to make maté.
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An evergreen tree or shrub with long, narrow leaves, native to China and Japan, Podocarpus macrophyllus, widely grown for its attractive foliage.
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The bark of this tree used as an aphrodisiac
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A Himalayan hornbeam (Carpinus vimineus).
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A perennial South American tree, Anadenanthera peregrina, that has a number of traditional uses
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Eucalyptus loxophleba, a mallee endemic to Western Australia.
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Albizia saman, a large tropical tree in the pea family.
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Alternative form of sapodilla [Manilkara zapota, a long-lived evergreen tree native to the New World tropics.]
n
Any wood with a figure (grain pattern) like the striping of a zebra, most often wood of the genus Microberlinia.
n
The wood of Pterocarpus santalinus, the red sandalwood tree
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