Parole in English per 'Quercus phellos'
Sopra trovi parole correlate a "Quercus phellos". Porta il focus o il cursore su una parola per vedere la definizione.
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- Quercus × pauciloba (=Quercus undulata)
- kermes oak (Quercus coccifera)
- In Europe
- California scrub oak (Quercus berberidifolia)
- coastal scrub oak (Quercus dumosa), variously circumscribed.
- myrtle oak (Quercus myrtifolia)
- island scrub oak (Quercus pacifica)
- In the northeastern United States:
- Sandhill oak (Quercus inopina)
- Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii)
- turkey oak (Quercus laevis)
- Sonoran scrub oak (Quercus turbinella)
- bear oak (Quercus ilicifolia)
- Chapman oak (Quercus chapmanii)
- Santa Cruz Island oak (Quercus parvula)
- sand live oak (Quercus geminata)
- Tucker oak (Quercus john-tuckeri)
- Emory oak (Quercus emoryi)
- leather oak (Quercus durata)
- any of various chiefly American small shrubby oaks often a dominant form on thin dry soils sometimes forming dense thickets
- The tree Quercus palustris.
- The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.
- fast-growing medium to large pyramidal deciduous tree of northeastern United States and southeastern Canada having deeply pinnatifid leaves that turn bright red in autumn; thrives in damp soil
- large nearly semi-evergreen oak of southeastern United States; thrives in damp soil
- Quercus laevis, of the southeastern U.S.
- Quercus incana, of the southern U.S., from Texas through the Piedmont to Virginia
- small semi-evergreen shrubby tree of southeastern United States having hairy young branchlets and leaves narrowing to a slender bristly point
- large round-topped deciduous tree with spreading branches having narrow falcate leaves with deeply sinuate lobes and wood similar to that of northern red oaks; New Jersey to Illinois and southward
- large deciduous tree of central and southern Europe and Asia Minor having lanceolate leaves with spiked lobes
- small slow-growing deciduous shrubby tree of dry sandy barrens of southeastern United States having leaves with bristle-tipped lobes resembling turkey's toes
- A tree of the species Quercus bicolor.
- A tree of the species Quercus palustris.
- A tree of the species Casuarina glauca.
- fast-growing medium to large pyramidal deciduous tree of northeastern United States and southeastern Canada having deeply pinnatifid leaves that turn bright red in autumn; thrives in damp soil
- large deciduous oak of the eastern United States with a flaky bark and leaves that have fewer lobes than other white oaks; yields heavy strong wood used in construction; thrives in wet soil
- Australian leafless shrub resembling broom and having small yellow flowers
- Quercus muehlenbergii, a tree whose leaves resemble those of chestnut-genus chinquapins.
- Chinese chinkapin (Castanea henryi)
- A water chinquapin, an aquatic plant of species Nelumbo lutea, American lotus.
- Any in the genus Chrysolepis of trees and shrubs.
- Allegheny chinkapin (Castanea pumila)
- Ozark chinkapin (Castanea ozarkensis)
- A redear sunfish, a freshwater fish of the southeastern US (Lepomis microlophus).
- Any in the genus Castanopsis of trees.
- shrubby chestnut tree of southeastern United States having small edible nuts
- small nut of either of two small chestnut trees of the southern United States; resembles a hazelnut
- shrubby tree closely related to the Allegheny chinkapin but with larger leaves; southern midwestern United States
- a deciduous tree of the genus Quercus; has acorns and lobed leaves
- Any tree of the genus Quercus, in family Fagaceae.
- the hard durable wood of any oak; used especially for furniture and flooring
- Lagunaria, white oak, in family Malvaceae
- The she-oaks in Allocasuarina and Casuarina, of family Casuarinaceae
- (wine) The flavor of oak.
- Various tanbark oak or stone oak species in family Fagaceae, genera Lithocarpus and Notholithocarpus.
- Toxicodendron, poison oak, in family Anacardiaceae
- Various species called silky oak, in family Proteaceae
- The outer (lockable) door of a set of rooms in a college or similar institution. (Often in the phrase sport one's oak.)
- A rich brown color, like that of oak wood.
- (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.
- (uncountable) The wood of the oak.
- Cucurbita argyrosperma
- Cucurbita pepo
- Cucurbita maxima
- Cucurbita moschata
- any of various plants of the species Cucurbita maxima and Cucurbita moschata producing squashes that have hard rinds and mature in the fall
- any of various fruits of the gourd family with thick rinds and edible yellow to orange flesh that mature in the fall and can be stored for several months
- Fouquieria splendens (ocotillo).
- A long whip used by the driver of a horse-drawn coach.
- Masticophis flagellum, a colubrid snake of North America.
- a whipsnake of southern United States and Mexico; tail resembles a braided whip
- desert shrub of southwestern United States and Mexico having slender naked spiny branches that after the rainy season put forth foliage and clusters of red flowers
- quassia (Quassia amara)
- Jamaica quassia Picrasma excelsa, native to the Caribbean
- paradise tree Simarouba glauca, native to Florida, the Caribbean and Central America
- West Indian tree yielding the drug Jamaica quassia
- handsome South American shrub or small tree having bright scarlet flowers and yielding a valuable fine-grained yellowish wood; yields the bitter drug quassia from its wood and bark
- medium to large tree of tropical North and South America having odd-pinnate leaves and long panicles of small pale yellow flowers followed by scarlet fruits
- (botany) The lip of a labiate corolla.
- (zoology) A liplike part of various invertebrates.
- (entomology) A lower mouthpart of an insect that is formed by the second pair of maxillae united in the middle line.
- (anatomy, usually in the plural) A liplike structure; especially one of the vulva's two pairs of folds of skin on either side.
- (music) The lip against which pressured air is driven to produce sound in a recorder and in a pipe organ with flue pipes.
- a liplike structure that bounds a bodily orifice (especially any of the four labiate folds of a woman's vulva)
- Caesalpinia crista (cadoque)
- Martynia annua (small-fruit devil's-claw, tiger's-claw, iceplant), a plant species endemic to Brazil
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see cat, claw.
- Mimosa nuttallii (formerly Schrankia nuttalli), a plant native to the Midwestern United States
- Senegalia greggii, formerly Acacia greggii, a tree species native to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico
- Senegalia lowei (syn. Acacia plumosa, feathery acacia), a medicinal plant species native to Brazil
- Uncaria rhynchophylla, a plant species used in traditional Chinese medicine
- Uncaria tomentosa, a plant species found in the tropical jungles of South and Central America
- Carpobrotus edulis (Hottentot fig), a plant species in the Aizoaceae family
- Uncaria guianensis, a plant species found in Guyana
- Dolichandra unguis-cati (cat's claw creeper), a Central American climbing vine of the Bignoniaceae family
- Grevillea alpina (catclaws grevillea, a shrub species native to Australia
- Biancaea decapetala (Mauritius thorn, Mysore thorn, caniroc, shoofly, woody wait-a-whiile), a thorny evergreen shrub of India
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- Quercus × pauciloba (=Quercus undulata)
- kermes oak (Quercus coccifera)
- In Europe
- California scrub oak (Quercus berberidifolia)
- coastal scrub oak (Quercus dumosa), variously circumscribed.
- myrtle oak (Quercus myrtifolia)
- island scrub oak (Quercus pacifica)
- In the northeastern United States:
- Sandhill oak (Quercus inopina)
- Gambel oak (Quercus gambelii)
- turkey oak (Quercus laevis)
- Sonoran scrub oak (Quercus turbinella)
- bear oak (Quercus ilicifolia)
- Chapman oak (Quercus chapmanii)
- Santa Cruz Island oak (Quercus parvula)
- sand live oak (Quercus geminata)
- Tucker oak (Quercus john-tuckeri)
- Emory oak (Quercus emoryi)
- leather oak (Quercus durata)
- any of various chiefly American small shrubby oaks often a dominant form on thin dry soils sometimes forming dense thickets
- The tree Quercus palustris.
- The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.
- fast-growing medium to large pyramidal deciduous tree of northeastern United States and southeastern Canada having deeply pinnatifid leaves that turn bright red in autumn; thrives in damp soil
- large nearly semi-evergreen oak of southeastern United States; thrives in damp soil
- Quercus laevis, of the southeastern U.S.
- Quercus incana, of the southern U.S., from Texas through the Piedmont to Virginia
- small semi-evergreen shrubby tree of southeastern United States having hairy young branchlets and leaves narrowing to a slender bristly point
- large round-topped deciduous tree with spreading branches having narrow falcate leaves with deeply sinuate lobes and wood similar to that of northern red oaks; New Jersey to Illinois and southward
- large deciduous tree of central and southern Europe and Asia Minor having lanceolate leaves with spiked lobes
- small slow-growing deciduous shrubby tree of dry sandy barrens of southeastern United States having leaves with bristle-tipped lobes resembling turkey's toes
- A tree of the species Quercus bicolor.
- A tree of the species Quercus palustris.
- A tree of the species Casuarina glauca.
- fast-growing medium to large pyramidal deciduous tree of northeastern United States and southeastern Canada having deeply pinnatifid leaves that turn bright red in autumn; thrives in damp soil
- large deciduous oak of the eastern United States with a flaky bark and leaves that have fewer lobes than other white oaks; yields heavy strong wood used in construction; thrives in wet soil
- Australian leafless shrub resembling broom and having small yellow flowers
- Quercus muehlenbergii, a tree whose leaves resemble those of chestnut-genus chinquapins.
- Chinese chinkapin (Castanea henryi)
- A water chinquapin, an aquatic plant of species Nelumbo lutea, American lotus.
- Any in the genus Chrysolepis of trees and shrubs.
- Allegheny chinkapin (Castanea pumila)
- Ozark chinkapin (Castanea ozarkensis)
- A redear sunfish, a freshwater fish of the southeastern US (Lepomis microlophus).
- Any in the genus Castanopsis of trees.
- shrubby chestnut tree of southeastern United States having small edible nuts
- small nut of either of two small chestnut trees of the southern United States; resembles a hazelnut
- shrubby tree closely related to the Allegheny chinkapin but with larger leaves; southern midwestern United States
- a deciduous tree of the genus Quercus; has acorns and lobed leaves
- Any tree of the genus Quercus, in family Fagaceae.
- the hard durable wood of any oak; used especially for furniture and flooring
- Lagunaria, white oak, in family Malvaceae
- The she-oaks in Allocasuarina and Casuarina, of family Casuarinaceae
- (wine) The flavor of oak.
- Various tanbark oak or stone oak species in family Fagaceae, genera Lithocarpus and Notholithocarpus.
- Toxicodendron, poison oak, in family Anacardiaceae
- Various species called silky oak, in family Proteaceae
- The outer (lockable) door of a set of rooms in a college or similar institution. (Often in the phrase sport one's oak.)
- A rich brown color, like that of oak wood.
- (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.
- (uncountable) The wood of the oak.
- Cucurbita argyrosperma
- Cucurbita pepo
- Cucurbita maxima
- Cucurbita moschata
- any of various plants of the species Cucurbita maxima and Cucurbita moschata producing squashes that have hard rinds and mature in the fall
- any of various fruits of the gourd family with thick rinds and edible yellow to orange flesh that mature in the fall and can be stored for several months
- Fouquieria splendens (ocotillo).
- A long whip used by the driver of a horse-drawn coach.
- Masticophis flagellum, a colubrid snake of North America.
- a whipsnake of southern United States and Mexico; tail resembles a braided whip
- desert shrub of southwestern United States and Mexico having slender naked spiny branches that after the rainy season put forth foliage and clusters of red flowers
- quassia (Quassia amara)
- Jamaica quassia Picrasma excelsa, native to the Caribbean
- paradise tree Simarouba glauca, native to Florida, the Caribbean and Central America
- West Indian tree yielding the drug Jamaica quassia
- handsome South American shrub or small tree having bright scarlet flowers and yielding a valuable fine-grained yellowish wood; yields the bitter drug quassia from its wood and bark
- medium to large tree of tropical North and South America having odd-pinnate leaves and long panicles of small pale yellow flowers followed by scarlet fruits
- (botany) The lip of a labiate corolla.
- (zoology) A liplike part of various invertebrates.
- (entomology) A lower mouthpart of an insect that is formed by the second pair of maxillae united in the middle line.
- (anatomy, usually in the plural) A liplike structure; especially one of the vulva's two pairs of folds of skin on either side.
- (music) The lip against which pressured air is driven to produce sound in a recorder and in a pipe organ with flue pipes.
- a liplike structure that bounds a bodily orifice (especially any of the four labiate folds of a woman's vulva)
- Caesalpinia crista (cadoque)
- Martynia annua (small-fruit devil's-claw, tiger's-claw, iceplant), a plant species endemic to Brazil
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see cat, claw.
- Mimosa nuttallii (formerly Schrankia nuttalli), a plant native to the Midwestern United States
- Senegalia greggii, formerly Acacia greggii, a tree species native to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico
- Senegalia lowei (syn. Acacia plumosa, feathery acacia), a medicinal plant species native to Brazil
- Uncaria rhynchophylla, a plant species used in traditional Chinese medicine
- Uncaria tomentosa, a plant species found in the tropical jungles of South and Central America
- Carpobrotus edulis (Hottentot fig), a plant species in the Aizoaceae family
- Uncaria guianensis, a plant species found in Guyana
- Dolichandra unguis-cati (cat's claw creeper), a Central American climbing vine of the Bignoniaceae family
- Grevillea alpina (catclaws grevillea, a shrub species native to Australia
- Biancaea decapetala (Mauritius thorn, Mysore thorn, caniroc, shoofly, woody wait-a-whiile), a thorny evergreen shrub of India
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Nessuna parola corrispondente trovata. Prova una descrizione più ampia.