Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A deciduous shrub (Dirca palustris) of eastern North America, having tough flexible branches, pliable bark, and small yellow flowers.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A North American shrub of the genus Dirca, with very tough bark. See
Dirca . - noun An Australian tree or shrub of the genus Ceratopetalum, belonging to the saxifrage family; also, its wood.
- noun The Tasmanian pinkwood, Eucryphia Billardieri. See
pinkwood , 2. - noun In the southeastern United States, Cyrilla racemiflora, a bush or small, wide-spreading tree of bottom-lands, with a hard wood and, at the base of the trunk, a spongy pliable bark, recommended for a styptic. More often called
ironwood and sometimes he-huckleberry, burnwood, or burnwood-bark, and red or white titi. Sometimes calledSouthern leatherwood . SeeCyrillaceæ .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Bot.) A small branching shrub (
Dirca palustris ), with a white, soft wood, and a tough, leathery bark, common in damp woods in the Northern United States; -- called alsomoosewood , andwicopy .
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
deciduous shrub , of the genus Dirca, that has leathery bark
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun deciduous shrub of eastern North America having tough flexible branches and pliable bark and small yellow flowers
- noun shrub or small tree of southeastern United States to West Indies and Brazil; grown for the slender racemes of white flowers and orange and crimson foliage
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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The forests of this ecoregion have considerable economic value: native conifers such as King Billy pine and Huon pine as well as some eucalypts are valued for their timber; the leatherwood tree is a nectar source for valuable honey; and the Wilderness Area draws large numbers of tourists.
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Most of the rain forest contains myrtle beech Nothofagus cunninghamii, leatherwood Eucryphia lucida and sassafras Atherosperma moschatum, of which myrtle beech is usually dominant.
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That's just plain scary, I made myself some fruit bread smeared with leatherwood honey only the other day.
Heritage Honey Haalo 2007
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John Bignall's sheep's milk blue on rye with Julian Wolfhagen leatherwood honey
"A Taste of Slow" Food Festival Niki 2006
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John Bignall's sheep's milk blue on rye with Julian Wolfhagen leatherwood honey
Archive 2006-09-01 Niki 2006
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Then Ansel scurried from his hiding spot beneath the branches of a leatherwood and buckthorn.
Shiver Jackson, Lisa 2006
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Laurus nobilis lavender lawn, making lawns, treatment leaf cuttings leatherwood leek
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Gillespie pulled the leatherwood latch-string which lifted the catch of his door, and pushed it open.
The Leatherwood God William Dean Howells 1878
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The leatherwood tree which gave this creek its name had
Stories Of Ohio William Dean Howells 1878
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Its bark, also, has a homogeneous character with the twigs, and is used for making ropes and baskets; and both, but especially the twigs, occasion the plant to be popularly called in Canada leatherwood.
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