Aloes wood () See Agalloch. |
Amboyna wood () A beautiful mottled and curled wood, used in cabinetwork. It is obtained from the Pterocarpus Indicus of Amboyna, Borneo, etc. |
Bethabara wood () A highly elastic wood, used for fishing rods, etc. The tree is unknown, but it is thought to be East Indian. |
Brazil wood () The wood of the oriental Caesalpinia Sapan |
Brazil wood () A very heavy wood of a reddish color, imported from Brazil and other tropical countries, for cabinet-work, and for dyeing. The best is the heartwood of Caesalpinia echinata, a leguminous tree |
Calamander wood () A valuable furniture wood from India and Ceylon, of a hazel-brown color, with black stripes, very hard in texture. It is a species of ebony, and is obtained from the Diospyros quaesita. Called also Coromandel wood. |
Campeachy Wood () Logwood. |
Cocus wood () A West Indian wood, used for making flutes and other musical instruments. |
Gopher wood () A species of wood used in the construction of Noah's ark. |
Kiabooca wood () See Kyaboca wood. |
Kyaboca wood () Amboyna wood. |
Kyaboca wood () Sandalwood (Santalum album). |
Lambert pine () The gigantic sugar pine of California and Oregon (Pinus Lambertiana). It has the leaves in fives, and cones a foot long. The timber is soft, and like that of the white pine of the Eastern States. |
Lingoa wood () Amboyna wood. |
Myall wood () A durable, fragrant, and dark-colored Australian wood, used by the natives for spears. It is obtained from the small tree Acacia homolophylla. |
Nicaragua wood () Brazil wood. |
Omander wood () The wood of Diospyros ebenaster, a kind of ebony found in Ceylon. |
Pine (n.) Woe |
Pine (v.) To inflict pain upon |
Pine (v.) To grieve or mourn for. |
Pine (v. i.) To suffer |
Pine (v. i.) To languish |
Pine (v. i.) To languish with desire |
Pine (n.) Any tree of the coniferous genus Pinus. See Pinus. |
Pine (n.) The wood of the pine tree. |
Pine (n.) A pineapple. |
Pine-clad (a.) Alt. of Pine-crowned |
Pine-crowned (a.) Clad or crowned with pine trees |
Pulp (n.) A moist, slightly cohering mass, consisting of soft, undissolved animal or vegetable matter. |
Pulp (n.) A tissue or part resembling pulp |
Pulp (n.) The soft, succulent part of fruit |
Pulp (n.) The exterior part of a coffee berry. |
Pulp (n.) The material of which paper is made when ground up and suspended in water. |
Pulp (v. t.) To reduce to pulp. |
Pulp (v. t.) To deprive of the pulp, or integument. |
Rosetta wood () An east Indian wood of a reddish orange color, handsomely veined with darker marks. It is occasionally used for cabinetwork. |
Sapan wood () A dyewood yielded by Caesalpinia Sappan, a thorny leguminous tree of Southern Asia and the neighboring islands. It is the original Brazil wood. |
Sappan wood () Sapan wood. |
Sea wood louse () A sea slater. |
Shittim wood (n.) The wood of the shittah tree. |
Slash pine () A kind of pine tree (Pinus Cubensis) found in Southern Florida and the West Indies |
Spruce (a.) Any coniferous tree of the genus Picea, as the Norway spruce (P. excelsa), and the white and black spruces of America (P. alba and P. nigra), besides several others in the far Northwest. See Picea. |
Spruce (a.) The wood or timber of the spruce tree. |
Spruce (a.) Prussia leather |
Spruce (n.) Neat, without elegance or dignity |
Spruce (n.) Sprightly |
Spruce (v. t.) To dress with affected neatness |
Spruce (v. i.) To dress one's self with affected neatness |
Thyine wood () The fragrant and beautiful wood of a North African tree (Callitris quadrivalvis), formerly called Thuja articulata. The tree is of the Cedar family, and furnishes a balsamic resin called sandarach. |
Wood (a.) Mad |
Battle of the Marne Belleau Wood Chateau-Thierry Marne River | a World War I battle in northwestern France where the Allies defeated the Germans in |
pine siskin pine finch Spinus pinus | small finch of North American coniferous forests |
pine grosbeak Pinicola enucleator | large grosbeak of coniferous forests of Old and New Worlds |
pewee peewee peewit pewit wood pewee Contopus virens | small oliveolored woodland flycatchers of eastern North America |
western wood pewee Contopus sordidulus | small flycatcher of western North America |
wood thrush Hylocichla mustelina | large thrush common in eastern American woodlands, noted for its melodious song |
wood warbler Phylloscopus sibilatrix | European woodland warbler with dull yellow plumage |
New World warbler wood warbler | small brightolored American songbird with a weak unmusical song |
wood swallow swallow shrike | Australasian and Asiatic bird related to the shrikes and resembling a swallow |
wood-frog wood frog Rana sylvatica | wideanging light-brown frog of moist North American woodlands especially spruce |
eastern fence lizard pine lizard Sceloporus undulatus | small active lizard of United States and north to British Columbia |
pine snake | any of several bull snakes of eastern and southeastern United States found chiefly in pine woods, now threatened |
wood tick American dog tick Dermacentor variabilis | common tick that can transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever and tularemia |
capercaillie capercailzie horse of the wood Tetrao urogallus | large black Old World grouse |
spruce grouse Canachites canadensis | North American grouse that feeds on evergreen buds and needles |
wood pigeon ringdove cushat Columba palumbus | Eurasian pigeon with white patches on wings and neck |
wood hoopoe | tropical African bird having metallic blackish plumage but no crest |
wood duck summer duck wood widgeon Aix sponsa | showy North American duck that nests in hollow trees |
wood drake | male wood duck |
wood ibis wood stork flinthead Mycteria americana | an American stork that resembles the true ibises in having a downwardurved bill, inhabits wooded swamps of New World tropics |
wood ibis wood stork Ibis ibis | any of several Old World birds of the genus Ibis |
weka maori hen wood hen | flightless New Zealand rail of thievish disposition having short wings each with a spur used in fighting |
pine sawyer | large beetle whose larvae bore holes in pine trees |
spruce bark beetle Dendroctonus rufipennis | small beetle that likes to bore through the bark of spruce trees and eat the cambium which eventually kills the tree, the spruce bark beetle is the major tree-killing insect pest of Alaska spruce forests |
wood ant Formica rufa | reddish-brown European ant typically living in anthills in woodlands |
dry-wood termite | any of various termites that live in and feed on dry wood that is not connected with the soil |
spruce gall aphid Adelges abietis | a variety of adelgid |
pine leaf aphid Pineus pinifoliae | a variety of adelgid |
pine spittlebug | North American insect that attacks pines |
wood rabbit cottontail cottontail rabbit | common small rabbit of North America having greyish or brownish fur and a tail with a white underside, a host for Ixodes pacificus and Ixodes scapularis (Lyme disease ticks) |
European wood mouse Apodemus sylvaticus | nocturnal yellowish-brown mouse inhabiting woods and fields and gardens |
wood mouse | any of various New World woodland mice |
wood rat woodat | any of various small short-tailed rodents of the northern hemisphere having soft fur grey above and white below with furred tails and large ears, some are hosts for Ixodes pacificus and Ixodes scapularis (Lyme disease ticks) |
dusky-footed wood rat | a wood rat with dusky feet |
pine vole pine mouse Pitymys pinetorum | short-tailed glossy-furred burrowing vole of the eastern United States |
American red squirrel spruce squirrel red squirrel Sciurus hudsonicus Tamiasciurus hudsonicus | of northern United States and Canada |
skunk polecat wood pussy | American musteline mammal typically ejecting an intensely malodorous fluid when startled, in some classifications put in a separate subfamily Mephitinae |
pine marten Martes martes | dark brown marten of northern Eurasian coniferous forests |
driver number one wood | a golf club (a wood) with a near vertical face that is used for hitting long shots from the tee |
metal wood | golf wood with a metal head instead of the traditional wooden head |
pine-tar rag | baseball equipment consisting of a rag soaked with pine tar, used on the handle of a baseball bat to give a batter a firm grip |
rasp wood file | a coarse file with sharp pointed projections |
wood | a golf club with a long shaft used to hit long shots, originally made with a wooden head, metal woods are now standard |
wood chisel | a chisel for working wood, it is either struck with a mallet or pushed by hand |
woodcut wood block wood engraving | engraving consisting of a block of wood with a design cut into it, used to make prints |
woodcut wood engraving | a print made from a woodcut |
wood vise woodworking vise shoulder vise | a vise with jaws that are padded in order to hold lumber without denting it |
woodwind woodwind instrument wood | any wind instrument other than the brass instruments |
wood grain woodgrain woodiness | texture produced by the fibers in wood |
pulp cavity | the central cavity of a tooth containing the pulp (including the root canal) |