Angostura bark () An aromatic bark used as a tonic, obtained from a South American of the rue family (Galipea cusparia, / officinalis). |
Angustura bark () See Angostura bark. |
Bark (v. t.) To strip the bark from |
Bark (v. t.) To abrade or rub off any outer covering from |
Bark (v. t.) To girdle. See Girdle, v. t., 3. |
Bark (v. t.) To cover or inclose with bark, or as with bark |
Bark (v. i.) To make a short, loud, explosive noise with the vocal organs |
Bark (v. i.) To make a clamor |
Bark (n.) The short, loud, explosive sound uttered by a dog |
Bark (n.) Alt. of Barque |
Bark beetle () A small beetle of many species (family Scolytidae), which in the larval state bores under or in the bark of trees, often doing great damage. |
Bark louse () An insect of the family Coccidae, which infests the bark of trees and vines. |
Calisaya bark () A valuable kind of Peruvian bark obtained from the Cinchona Calisaya, and other closely related species. |
Extract (v. t.) To draw out or forth |
Extract (v. t.) To withdraw by expression, distillation, or other mechanical or chemical process |
Extract (v. t.) To take by selection |
Extract (n.) That which is extracted or drawn out. |
Extract (n.) A portion of a book or document, separately transcribed |
Extract (n.) A decoction, solution, or infusion made by drawing out from any substance that which gives it its essential and characteristic virtue |
Extract (n.) A solid preparation obtained by evaporating a solution of a drug, etc., or the fresh juice of a plant |
Extract (n.) A peculiar principle once erroneously supposed to form the basis of all vegetable extracts |
Extract (n.) Extraction |
Extract (n.) A draught or copy of writing |
Goulards extract () An aqueous solution of the subacetate of lead, used as a lotion in cases of inflammation. Goulard's cerate is a cerate containing this extract. |
Lace-bark (n.) A shrub in the West Indies (Lagetta Iintearia) |
Mancona bark () See Sassy bark. |
Nine-bark (n.) A white-flowered rosaceous shrub (Neillia, / Spiraea, opulifolia), common in the Northern United States. The bark separates into many thin layers, whence the name. |
Quillaia bark () The bark of a rosaceous tree (Quillaja Saponaria), native of Chili. The bark is finely laminated, and very heavy with alkaline substances, and is used commonly by the Chilians instead of soap. Also called soap bark. |
Sassy bark () The bark of a West African leguminous tree (Erythrophlaeum Guineense, used by the natives as an ordeal poison, and also medicinally |
Winter's bark () The aromatic bark of tree (Drimys, / Drymis, Winteri) of the Magnolia family, which is found in Southern Chili. It was first used as a cure for scurvy by its discoverer, Captain John Winter, vice admiral to sir Francis Drake, in 1577. |
bark beetle | small beetle that bores tunnels in the bark and wood of trees, related to weevils |
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 |
bark-louse bark louse | any of several insects living on the bark of plants |
bark barque | a sailing ship with (or more) masts |
birchbark canoe birchbark birch bark | a canoe made with the bark of a birch tree |
excerpt excerption extract selection | a passage selected from a larger work, he presented excerpts from William James' philosophical writings |
bark | the sound made by a dog |
bark | a noise resembling the bark of a dog |
cola extract | a flavoring extracted from the kola nut |
almond extract | flavoring made from almonds macerated in alcohol |
lemon extract | a flavoring made from (or imitating) lemons |
vanilla vanilla extract | a flavoring prepared from vanilla beans macerated in alcohol (or imitating vanilla beans) |
dundathu pine queensland kauri smooth bark kauri Agathis robusta | Australian timber tree resembling the kauri but having wood much lighter in weight and softer |
cinnamon cinnamon bark | aromatic bark used as a spice |
cassia cassia-bark tree Cinnamomum cassia | Chinese tree with aromatic bark, yields a less desirable cinnamon than Ceylon cinnamon |
cassia bark Chinese cinnamon | aromatic bark of the cassia-bark tree, less desirable as a spice than Ceylon cinnamon bark |
cinnamon bark | aromatic bark of Saigon cinnamon used medicinally as a carminative |
Winteraceae family Winteraceae winter's bark family | small family of chiefly tropical shrubs and trees of genera Drimys and Pseudowintera, sometimes included in Magnoliaceae |
winter's bark winter's bark tree Drimys winteri | South American evergreen tree yielding winter's bark and a light soft wood similar to basswood |
dita dita bark devil tree Alstonia scholaris | evergreen tree of eastern Asia and Philippines having large leathery leaves and small green-white flowers in compact cymes, bark formerly used medicinally |
canella canella bark white cinnamon | highly aromatic inner bark of the Canella winterana used as a condiment and a tonic |
cabbage bark cabbage-bark tree cabbage tree Andira inermis | tree with shaggy unpleasant-smelling toxic bark and yielding strong durable wood, bark and seeds used as a purgative and vermifuge and narcotic |
Cartagena bark Cinchona cordifolia Cinchona lancifolia | Colombian tree, source of Cartagena bark (a cinchona bark) |
cinchona cinchona bark Peruvian bark Jesuit's bark | medicinal bark of cinchona trees, source of quinine and quinidine |
fever tree Georgia bark bitter-bark Pinckneya pubens | ornamental shrub or small tree of swampy areas in southwestern United States having large pink or white sepals and yielding Georgia bark for treating fever |
cascarilla bark eleuthera bark sweetwood bark | aromatic bark of cascarilla, used as a tonic and for making incense |
cascara cascara sagrada chittam bark chittem bark | dried bark of the cascara buckthorn used as a laxative |
bark | tough protective covering of the woody stems and roots of trees and other woody plants |
winter's bark | aromatic bark having tonic and stimulant properties |
tapa tapa bark tappa tappa bark | the thin fibrous bark of the paper mulberry and Pipturus albidus |
angostura bark angostura | the bitter bark of a South American tree, used in medicines and liqueurs and bitters |
chestnut blight chestnut canker chestnut-bark disease | a disease of American chestnut trees |
infusion extract | a solution obtained by steeping or soaking a substance (usually in water) |
distill extract distil | extract by the process of distillation, distill the essence of this compound |
bark | tan (a skin) with bark tannins |
extract | calculate the root of a number |
excerpt extract take out | take out of a literary work in order to cite or copy |
bark | speak in an unfriendly tone, She barked into the dictaphone |
bark | make barking sounds, The dogs barked at the stranger |
bark skin | remove the bark of a tree |
bark | cover with bark |
extract pull out pull a pull up take out draw out | remove, usually with some force or effort, also used in an abstract sense, pull weeds, extract a bad tooth, take out a splinter, extract information from the telegram |
press out express b extract | obtain from a substance, as by mechanical action, Italians express coffee rather than filter it |
extract | separate (a metal) from an ore |
educe evoke elicit extract draw out | deduce (a principle) or construe (a meaning), We drew out some interesting linguistic data from the native informant |
extract | get despite difficulties or obstacles, I extracted a promise from the Dean for two new positions |