English words for 'The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.'
Closest matches for "The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis." are ranked by semantic fit across dictionary definitions.
Search results
noun
- The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.
- The tree Quercus palustris.
- 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
noun
- A tree of the species Quercus palustris.
- A tree of the species Quercus bicolor.
- 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
noun
- The tree Elaeocarpus joga.
- Any of several Hindu or Buddhist disciplines aimed at training the consciousness for a state of perfect spiritual insight and tranquillity; especially a system of exercises practiced to promote control of the body and mind.
- discipline aimed at training the consciousness for a state of perfect spiritual insight and tranquility that is achieved through the three paths of actions and knowledge and devotion
- a system of physical, breathing and meditation exercises practiced to promote control of the body and mind
noun
- 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.
adj
verb
noun
- 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
noun
- A plant in the family Elaeagnaceae,
- especially, a plant in the genus Elaeagnus,
- especially, the type species Elaeagnus angustifolia.
- Cultivated olive trees that have re-naturalized, sometimes treated as a species Olea oleaster, the wild olive.
- any of several shrubs of the genus Elaeagnus having silver-white twigs and yellow flowers followed by olivelike fruits
noun
noun
- (usually countable) An oak tree with rounded leaf lobes and relatively pale wood, native to eastern North America, Quercus alba.
- (usually countable) A similar oak tree in a subgenus, Quercus subg. Quercus, especially section Quercus.
- (usually uncountable) The wood of such trees.
- (usually countable) Lagunaria patersonia (Queensland white oak).
- any of numerous Old World and American oaks having 6 to 8 stamens in each floret, acorns that mature in one year and leaf veins that never extend beyond the margin of the leaf
noun
- A tree of the species Citrus reticulata.
- A figurine of a Chinese person with movable head that was popular in the 1950s. (Cf. bobblehead.)
- (sometimes derogatory) A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles.
- A small, sweet citrus fruit.
- (historical) A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire.
- An orange colour.
- (ornithology) Ellipsis of mandarin duck.
- A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat.
- (informal, British) A senior civil servant.
- shrub or small tree having flattened globose fruit with very sweet aromatic pulp and thin yellow-orange to flame-orange rind that is loose and easily removed; native to southeastern Asia
- a high public official of imperial China
- a member of an elite intellectual or cultural group
- a somewhat flat reddish-orange loose skinned citrus of China
- any high government official or bureaucrat
adj
noun
- quandong (Elaeocarpus ferruginiflorus)
- hard quandong (Elaeocarpus obovatus)
- white quandong (Elaeocarpus kirtonii)
- A small southern Australian shrub (Santalum acuminatum) or its edible red fruit.
- Arnhem Land quandong, bony quandong (Elaeocarpus arnhemicus)
- smooth-leaved quandong, eumundi (Elaeocarpus eumundi)
- Kuranda quandong (Elaeocarpus bancroftii)
- Northern quandong, hard quandong, Northern hard quandong (Elaeocarpus sericopetalus)
- hairy quandong (Elaeocarpus williamsianus)
- bitter quandong (Santalum murrayanum) or its fruit.
- tropical quandong (Elaeocarpus largiflorens)
- brown quandong, grey quandong (Elaeocarpus ruminatus)
- brush quandong, blue quandong, white quandong, quandong (Elaeocarpus grandis)
- white quandong, Northern quandong (Elaeocarpus foveolatus)
- highroot quandong (Aceratium concinnum)
- mountain quandong (Elaeocarpus holopetalus )
- buff guandong, grey quandong (Peripentadenia mearsii)
- brown-hearted quandong (Elaeocarpus kirtonii)
- Ash quandong (Elaeocarpus reticulatus)
- desert quandong (Santalum lanceolatum) or its fruit.
- blue quandong (Elaeocarpus angustifolius) or its fruit.
- brown quandong (Elaeocarpus coorangooloo)
- Kuranda quandong (Elaeocarpus johnsonii)
- Australian tree with edible flesh and edible nutlike seed
- red Australian fruit; used for dessert or in jam
- the fruit of the Brisbane quandong tree
- Australian tree having hard white timber and glossy green leaves with white flowers followed by one-seeded glossy blue fruit
noun
- A kind of tree, the arborvitae; an individual thereof.
- (biblical) A term used in the Hebrew Bible that is a component of the world tree motif.
- (biology) A metaphor used to describe the phylogenetic relationships between organisms, both living and extinct; a diagram that shows those relationships, with a treelike appearance.
- (Judaism) The central mystical symbol used in the Kabbalah of esoteric Judaism, also known as the ten sephiroth.
noun
- A deciduous tree, Paulownia tomentosa
- (rare) A female chimpanzee.
- The female monarch (ruler) of an empire.
- (tarot) The third trump or major arcana card of most tarot decks.
- The wife or widow of an emperor or equated ruler.
- (chess) A fairy chess piece which combines the moves of the rook and the knight.
- a woman emperor or the wife of an emperor
verb
noun
- A North American tree (Sideroxylon lanuginosum); the wood of this tree
- shrubby tree of the Pacific coast of the United States; yields cascara sagrada
- shrubby tree of southern United States having large plumes of feathery flowers resembling puffs of smoke
- deciduous tree of southeastern United States and Mexico
noun
- (usually countable) A deciduous oak tree, Quercus velutina, native to eastern North America.
- A related oak tree native to western North America, Quercus kelloggii, often considered the best oak for acorn mush by American Indians in its native range
- medium to large deciduous timber tree of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada having dark outer bark and yellow inner bark used for tanning; broad five-lobed leaves are bristle-tipped
noun
- (usually countable) An oak tree with wood of a red tint, with leaves that have pointed lobes, Quercus rubra, native to eastern North America.
- Agkistrodon contortrix, a venomous snake species found in North America.
- (usually uncountable) Wood from such trees.
- (usually countable) A similar tree of any of the many species in Quercus subg. Quercus, section Lobatae, found mostly in North America.
- (usually countable, Australia) Carnarvonia araliifolia, a rainforest tree from Australia.
- any of numerous American oaks having 4 stamens in each floret, acorns requiring two years to mature and leaf veins usually extending beyond the leaf margin to form points or bristles
noun
- Elaeocarpus obovatus (blueberry-ash), freckled oliveberry, grey carrobean, hard quandong), an Australian rainforest tree
- (pinball) A prototype version of a pinball table, without the final artwork.
- Petrobium atboreum (Saint Helena whitewood), an endemic tree of the island of St Helena
- Coccoloba krugii (whitewood seagrape), of the neotropics
- Tabebuia heterophylla (white cedar), of the Caribbean and South America.
- Liriodendron tulipifera (tulip poplar), a large flowering tree of North America.
- (uncountable) Wood of these trees or of spruce (Picea spp.)
- Terminalia buceras (black olive, gregory wood), a Caribbean tree
- An Australian rainforest tree of species Elaeocarpus kirtonii (brown-heart quandong, mountain beech, Mowbullan whitewood, pigeonberry ash, silver quandong, white quandong, white beech)
- light easily worked wood of a tulip tree; used for furniture and veneer
noun
prep_phrase
noun
- kermes oak (Quercus coccifera)
- In Europe
- Quercus × pauciloba (=Quercus undulata)
- 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
noun
- Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches.
- evergreen tree of the Pacific coast of North America having glossy leathery leaves and orange-red edible berries; wood used for furniture and bark for tanning
- chiefly evergreen shrubs of warm dry areas of western North America
noun
- The tree Quercus ellipsoidalis.
- The tree Quercus palustris.
- 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
noun
- A tree of the species Quercus palustris.
- A tree of the species Quercus bicolor.
- 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
noun
- The tree Elaeocarpus joga.
- Any of several Hindu or Buddhist disciplines aimed at training the consciousness for a state of perfect spiritual insight and tranquillity; especially a system of exercises practiced to promote control of the body and mind.
- discipline aimed at training the consciousness for a state of perfect spiritual insight and tranquility that is achieved through the three paths of actions and knowledge and devotion
- a system of physical, breathing and meditation exercises practiced to promote control of the body and mind
noun
- 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.
adj
verb
noun
- 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
noun
- A plant in the family Elaeagnaceae,
- especially, a plant in the genus Elaeagnus,
- especially, the type species Elaeagnus angustifolia.
- Cultivated olive trees that have re-naturalized, sometimes treated as a species Olea oleaster, the wild olive.
- any of several shrubs of the genus Elaeagnus having silver-white twigs and yellow flowers followed by olivelike fruits
noun
noun
- (usually countable) An oak tree with rounded leaf lobes and relatively pale wood, native to eastern North America, Quercus alba.
- (usually countable) A similar oak tree in a subgenus, Quercus subg. Quercus, especially section Quercus.
- (usually uncountable) The wood of such trees.
- (usually countable) Lagunaria patersonia (Queensland white oak).
- any of numerous Old World and American oaks having 6 to 8 stamens in each floret, acorns that mature in one year and leaf veins that never extend beyond the margin of the leaf
noun
- A tree of the species Citrus reticulata.
- A figurine of a Chinese person with movable head that was popular in the 1950s. (Cf. bobblehead.)
- (sometimes derogatory) A pedantic senior person of influence in academia or literary circles.
- A small, sweet citrus fruit.
- (historical) A high government bureaucrat of the Chinese Empire.
- An orange colour.
- (ornithology) Ellipsis of mandarin duck.
- A pedantic or elitist bureaucrat.
- (informal, British) A senior civil servant.
- shrub or small tree having flattened globose fruit with very sweet aromatic pulp and thin yellow-orange to flame-orange rind that is loose and easily removed; native to southeastern Asia
- a high public official of imperial China
- a member of an elite intellectual or cultural group
- a somewhat flat reddish-orange loose skinned citrus of China
- any high government official or bureaucrat
adj
noun
- quandong (Elaeocarpus ferruginiflorus)
- hard quandong (Elaeocarpus obovatus)
- white quandong (Elaeocarpus kirtonii)
- A small southern Australian shrub (Santalum acuminatum) or its edible red fruit.
- Arnhem Land quandong, bony quandong (Elaeocarpus arnhemicus)
- smooth-leaved quandong, eumundi (Elaeocarpus eumundi)
- Kuranda quandong (Elaeocarpus bancroftii)
- Northern quandong, hard quandong, Northern hard quandong (Elaeocarpus sericopetalus)
- hairy quandong (Elaeocarpus williamsianus)
- bitter quandong (Santalum murrayanum) or its fruit.
- tropical quandong (Elaeocarpus largiflorens)
- brown quandong, grey quandong (Elaeocarpus ruminatus)
- brush quandong, blue quandong, white quandong, quandong (Elaeocarpus grandis)
- white quandong, Northern quandong (Elaeocarpus foveolatus)
- highroot quandong (Aceratium concinnum)
- mountain quandong (Elaeocarpus holopetalus )
- buff guandong, grey quandong (Peripentadenia mearsii)
- brown-hearted quandong (Elaeocarpus kirtonii)
- Ash quandong (Elaeocarpus reticulatus)
- desert quandong (Santalum lanceolatum) or its fruit.
- blue quandong (Elaeocarpus angustifolius) or its fruit.
- brown quandong (Elaeocarpus coorangooloo)
- Kuranda quandong (Elaeocarpus johnsonii)
- Australian tree with edible flesh and edible nutlike seed
- red Australian fruit; used for dessert or in jam
- the fruit of the Brisbane quandong tree
- Australian tree having hard white timber and glossy green leaves with white flowers followed by one-seeded glossy blue fruit
noun
- A kind of tree, the arborvitae; an individual thereof.
- (biblical) A term used in the Hebrew Bible that is a component of the world tree motif.
- (biology) A metaphor used to describe the phylogenetic relationships between organisms, both living and extinct; a diagram that shows those relationships, with a treelike appearance.
- (Judaism) The central mystical symbol used in the Kabbalah of esoteric Judaism, also known as the ten sephiroth.
noun
- A deciduous tree, Paulownia tomentosa
- (rare) A female chimpanzee.
- The female monarch (ruler) of an empire.
- (tarot) The third trump or major arcana card of most tarot decks.
- The wife or widow of an emperor or equated ruler.
- (chess) A fairy chess piece which combines the moves of the rook and the knight.
- a woman emperor or the wife of an emperor
verb
noun
- A North American tree (Sideroxylon lanuginosum); the wood of this tree
- shrubby tree of the Pacific coast of the United States; yields cascara sagrada
- shrubby tree of southern United States having large plumes of feathery flowers resembling puffs of smoke
- deciduous tree of southeastern United States and Mexico
noun
- (usually countable) A deciduous oak tree, Quercus velutina, native to eastern North America.
- A related oak tree native to western North America, Quercus kelloggii, often considered the best oak for acorn mush by American Indians in its native range
- medium to large deciduous timber tree of the eastern United States and southeastern Canada having dark outer bark and yellow inner bark used for tanning; broad five-lobed leaves are bristle-tipped
noun
- (usually countable) An oak tree with wood of a red tint, with leaves that have pointed lobes, Quercus rubra, native to eastern North America.
- Agkistrodon contortrix, a venomous snake species found in North America.
- (usually uncountable) Wood from such trees.
- (usually countable) A similar tree of any of the many species in Quercus subg. Quercus, section Lobatae, found mostly in North America.
- (usually countable, Australia) Carnarvonia araliifolia, a rainforest tree from Australia.
- any of numerous American oaks having 4 stamens in each floret, acorns requiring two years to mature and leaf veins usually extending beyond the leaf margin to form points or bristles
noun
- Elaeocarpus obovatus (blueberry-ash), freckled oliveberry, grey carrobean, hard quandong), an Australian rainforest tree
- (pinball) A prototype version of a pinball table, without the final artwork.
- Petrobium atboreum (Saint Helena whitewood), an endemic tree of the island of St Helena
- Coccoloba krugii (whitewood seagrape), of the neotropics
- Tabebuia heterophylla (white cedar), of the Caribbean and South America.
- Liriodendron tulipifera (tulip poplar), a large flowering tree of North America.
- (uncountable) Wood of these trees or of spruce (Picea spp.)
- Terminalia buceras (black olive, gregory wood), a Caribbean tree
- An Australian rainforest tree of species Elaeocarpus kirtonii (brown-heart quandong, mountain beech, Mowbullan whitewood, pigeonberry ash, silver quandong, white quandong, white beech)
- light easily worked wood of a tulip tree; used for furniture and veneer
noun
noun
- kermes oak (Quercus coccifera)
- In Europe
- Quercus × pauciloba (=Quercus undulata)
- 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
noun
- Any evergreen shrub or tree of the genus Arctostaphylos, especially Arctostaphylos manzanita, having smooth red or orange bark and stiff, twisting branches.
- evergreen tree of the Pacific coast of North America having glossy leathery leaves and orange-red edible berries; wood used for furniture and bark for tanning
- chiefly evergreen shrubs of warm dry areas of western North America
No matching words found. Try a broader description.
No matching words found. Try a broader description.