n
(botany) A disease of unknown cause that affects oaks in the United Kingdom.
n
A leaf of the banana plant.
n
Synonym of waddywood (“tree”)
n
(computing) Synonym of red forest
n
A species of willow native to northern Europe and northern Asia, with leaves that resemble those of laurel, Salix pentandra.
n
A species of willow tree whose bark is especially rich in salicin and tannin.
n
The wood of beech trees (Fagus spp.).
v
To bear or produce berries.
n
Any of the species of the genus Sicista, found in Eurasian forests and steppes.
adj
(obsolete or dialectal, Scotland and Northern England) Made of birch; birchen.
n
(usually countable) A deciduous oak tree, Quercus velutina, native to eastern North America.
n
(obsolete) The Quercus nigra, water oak or barren oak.
n
Synonym of bur oak (Quercus macrocarpa).
n
Alternative form of box tree [(botany) Any of several trees, of the genus Buxus, often used as a hedge and as a source of boxwood]
n
Alternative form of bur oak [Quercus macrocarpa.]
n
Water stained deep brown by tannins and iron, particularly that found in the New Jersey Pine Barrens.
n
A species of oak tree native to the eastern USA (Quercus montana, syn. Quercus prinus).
n
Synonym of English holly
n
Alternative form of durmast oak, a species of tree. [A tree, Quercus petraea, the sessile oak.]
n
A species of juniper, Juniperus virginiana, of eastern North America.
n
Obsolete form of alder. [Any of several trees or shrubs of the genus Alnus, belonging to the birch family.]
n
(uncountable) This plant seen as a national emblem of England.
n
Obsolete spelling of yew [(countable) A species of coniferous tree, Taxus baccata, with dark-green flat needle-like leaves and seeds bearing red arils, native to western, central and southern Europe, northwest Africa, northern Iran and southwest Asia.]
n
(informal) An evergreen tree that has very dark, colorless leaves or needles.
n
(uncountable) A dye obtained from the wood of this tree.
n
Synonym of giant sequoia
n
A shoot of a woody plant used in grafting
n
Synonym of common woodrush
n
Synonym of Christmas tree
n
An evergreen tree, Quercus ilex, native to the Mediterranean region.
n
Quercus frainetto, a species of oak native to southeastern Europe (parts of Italy, the Balkans, parts of Hungary, Romania) and Turkey.
n
The resin derived from this tree, once sometimes used in the production of rubber.
n
Either of two trees native to the southeastern United States: Quercus hemisphaerica and Quercus laurifolia.
n
Alternative form of laurestine [The Viburnum tinus, an evergreen shrub or tree of the south of Europe, which flowers during the winter months.]
n
Alternative form of laurustinus; laurestine; Viburnum tinus.
n
An evergreen species of oak characteristic of the US South, the southern live oak, Quercus virginiana.
n
The leaf of the maple tree.
n
Synonym of candelabra tree (“Euphorbia ingens”)
n
(countable) A deciduous tree with distinctive deeply lobed leaves, acorns, and notably strong wood, typically of England and northeastern North America, included in genus Quercus.
n
(countable) A rectangular sheet of this material.
n
A tree of the genus Quercus, bearing acorns and having lobed leaves.
n
(countable) A rectangular sheet of this material.
n
The bark of the oak tree, often specifically as a source of tannic acid; tan.
n
The quality of being oak, or of being an oak tree.
n
(uncountable) A flexible material akin to thick paper.
n
The oak Quercus lyrata whose acorns are enclosed by their cups
n
A large, deciduous tree, English oak, Quercus robur
n
Alternative form of pedunculate oak [A large, deciduous tree, English oak, Quercus robur]
n
The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.
n
Alternative form of pinecone. [A seed-bearing conical fruit of a pine tree.]
n
A hothouse or (tropical) area used as a plantation for the cultivation of pineapple plants (genus Ananas) and production of their homonymous fruit.
n
(countable) A forest or grove of pine trees, either natural or as a plantation
n
Alternative spelling of piñon [(uncountable, countable) Any of several species of North American pines in Pinus subsect. Cembroides that bear edible seeds (pine nuts), especially Pinus edulis; the nut pine.]
n
(countable, uncountable) A pine nut.
n
Any of various trees of the genus Platanus.
n
Alternative form of plane tree (Platanus spp.). [Any of various trees of the genus Platanus.]
n
A species of willow, Salix polaris
n
A tree of the species Quercus stellata (family Fagaceae), native to North America.
n
An oak, Quercus coccifera, native to the western Mediterranean region and growing 1-6 meters tall.
n
(dated, rare) A wood or plantation of oak trees.
adj
Having characteristics of an oak (of genus Quercus)
n
(chiefly Ireland, Northern England) In full quicken tree: the European rowan, rowan, or mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia).
n
Wood that forms (in a woody plant) in response to gravity, which differs from normal wood in ways that give it additional strength so that a branch (etc) can resist bending downward or breaking.
n
(usually countable) A similar tree of any of the many species in Quercus subg. Quercus, section Lobatae, found mostly in North America.
n
A former constellation, between Crux and Carina, supposed to represent the oak where Charles II was said to have hidden from the troops of Oliver Cromwell after the Battle of Worcester.
adj
Characteristic of oaks of the species Quercus robur.
n
An oak tree in which King Charles II hid, and a popular name for public houses in the United Kingdom, past and present.
n
An oak tree of species Quercus havardii, of the southern Great Plains of the US, especially Texas.
n
Alternative form of silky oak [(countable) Any of various trees and large shrubs in the family Proteaceae, especially Grevillea robusta or Cardwellia sublimis.]
n
Alternative form of silky oak [(countable) Any of various trees and large shrubs in the family Proteaceae, especially Grevillea robusta or Cardwellia sublimis.]
n
(uncountable) The wood of these trees.
n
(uncountable) A color, CADFDD
n
Alternative form of silver spruce; A color, CADFDD [The Engelmann spruce, Picea engelmannii]
n
Alternative spelling of silver vine [matatabi (Actinidia polygama)]
n
A small tree (Ungnadia speciosa) of Texas, New Mexico, etc., related to the buckeye, but having pinnate leaves and a three-seeded fruit.
n
(botany) Synonym of spurge-laurel.
n
The bark of an oak or other tree from which tannic acid is obtained.
n
The bark of the oak (or other trees) used as a source of tannin
n
(uncountable) A yellowish brown colour, like that of teak wood.
n
Any tree of the linden genus Tilia.
n
(usually uncountable) The wood of such trees.
n
The wood of these trees.
n
A tree of the genus Salix.
n
(England, dialectal, possibly obsolete) An oak.
n
(uncountable) The substance making up the central part of the trunk and branches of a tree. Used as a material for construction, to manufacture various items, etc. or as fuel.
n
Alternative form of world-ash [(Norse mythology and Germanic paganism) Yggdrasil.]
n
(now less common than "yaupon") Alternative form of yaupon [The yaupon holly, Ilex vomitoria, an evergreen holly shrub with white flowers and red or yellow berries, found in the south-eastern United States.]
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