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Deutsche Palmyrapalme Synonyme

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Englische palmyra palm Synonyme

Palmyrapalme Definition

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.
Coco palm
() See Cocoa.
Cocoa palm
() A palm tree producing the cocoanut (Cocos nucifera). It grows in nearly all tropical countries, attaining a height of sixty or eighty feet. The trunk is without branches, and has a tuft of leaves at the top, each being fifteen or twenty feet in length, and at the base of these the nuts hang in clusters
Cocus wood
() A West Indian wood, used for making flutes and other musical instruments.
Doom palm
() A species of palm tree (Hyphaene Thebaica), highly valued for the fibrous pulp of its fruit, which has the flavor of gingerbread, and is largely eaten in Egypt and Abyssinia.
Doum palm
() See Doom palm.
Fan palm
() Any palm tree having fan-shaped or radiate leaves
Gopher wood
() A species of wood used in the construction of Noah's ark.
Grugru palm
() A West Indian name for several kinds of palm. See Macaw tree, under Macaw.
Ita palm
() A magnificent species of palm (Mauritia flexuosa), growing near the Orinoco. The natives eat its fruit and buds, drink its sap, and make thread and cord from its fiber.
Jagua palm
() A great Brazilian palm (Maximiliana regia), having immense spathes which are used for baskets and tubs.
Jupati palm
() A great Brazilian palm tree (Raphia taedigera), used by the natives for many purposes.
Kiabooca wood
() See Kyaboca wood.
Kyaboca wood
() Amboyna wood.
Kyaboca wood
() Sandalwood (Santalum album).
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.
Palm
(n.) The inner and somewhat concave part of the hand between the bases of the fingers and the wrist.
Palm
(n.) A lineal measure equal either to the breadth of the hand or to its length from the wrist to the ends of the fingers
Palm
(n.) A metallic disk, attached to a strap, and worn the palm of the hand, -- used to push the needle through the canvas, in sewing sails, etc.
Palm
(n.) The broad flattened part of an antler, as of a full-grown fallow deer
Palm
(n.) The flat inner face of an anchor fluke.
Palm
(n.) Any endogenous tree of the order Palmae or Palmaceae
Palm
(n.) A branch or leaf of the palm, anciently borne or worn as a symbol of victory or rejoicing.
Palm
(n.) Any symbol or token of superiority, success, or triumph
Palm
(v. t.) To handle.
Palm
(v. t.) To manipulate with, or conceal in, the palm of the hand
Palm
(v. t.) To impose by fraud, as by sleight of hand
Palm Sunday
() The Sunday next before Easter
Palmyra
(n.) A species of palm (Borassus flabelliformis) having a straight, black, upright trunk, with palmate leaves. It is found native along the entire northern shores of the Indian Ocean, from the mouth of the Tigris to New Guinea. More than eight hundred uses to which it is put are enumerated by native writers. Its wood is largely used for building purposes
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.
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
Wood
(v. i.) To grow mad
Wood
(n.) A large and thick collection of trees
Wood
(n.) The substance of trees and the like
Wood
(n.) The fibrous material which makes up the greater part of the stems and branches of trees and shrubby plants, and is found to a less extent in herbaceous stems. It consists of elongated tubular or needle-shaped cells of various kinds, usually interwoven with the shinning bands called silver grain.
Wood
(n.) Trees cut or sawed for the fire or other uses.

palmyra palm / palmyra palms / palmyra wood Bedeutung

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
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
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
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
banded palm civet
Hemigalus hardwickii
an East Indian civet
palm cat
palm civet
spotted or striped arboreal civet of southeast Asia and East Indies
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
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
skunk
polecat wood pussy
American musteline mammal typically ejecting an intensely malodorous fluid when startled, in some classifications put in a separate subfamily Mephitinae
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
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
palm
thenar
the inner surface of the hand from the wrist to the base of the fingers
palmistry
palm reading
chiromancy
chirology
telling fortunes by lines on the palm of the hand
decoration
laurel wreath
medal
medallion
palm
ribbon
an award for winning a championship or commemorating some other event
palm oil oil from nuts of oil palms especially the African oil palm
forest
wood
woods
the trees and other plants in a large densely wooded area
Palm Beach a resort town in southeast Florida on an island on the Atlantic coast
West Palm Beach a town in southeast Florida on the mainland opposite Palm Beach, founded as a commercial center for Palm Beach
dryad
wood nymph
a deity or nymph of the woods
Wood
Grant Wood
United States painter noted for works based on life in the Midwest (-)
Wood Mrs. Henry Wood
Ellen Price Wood
English writer of novels about murders and thefts and forgeries (-)
Wood Sir Henry Wood
Sir Henry Joseph Wood
English conductor (-)
Wood Natalie Wood United States film actress (-)
sago palm Cycas revoluta dwarf palmlike cycad of Japan that yields sago
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Drei Palmyrapalmen in Angkor Wat.