Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun Any of various evergreen trees of the genus Pinus, having fascicles of needle-shaped leaves and producing woody seed-bearing cones. These trees are widely cultivated for ornament and shade and for their timber and resinous sap, which yields turpentine and pine tar.
- noun Any of various other coniferous trees, such as the Norfolk Island pine.
- noun The wood of any of these trees.
- intransitive verb To feel a lingering, often nostalgic desire.
- intransitive verb To wither or waste away from longing or grief.
- intransitive verb To grieve or mourn for.
- noun Intense longing or grief.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun Any tree of the genus Pinus.
- noun One of various other coniferous trees, as the Moreton Bay pine and the Oregon pine (see below); also, one of a few small plants suggesting the pine. See
ground-pine . - noun The wood of any pine-tree.
- noun The pineapple.
- noun Same as
Austrian pine . - noun Same as
bull-pine . - noun Same as
miro . - noun Same as
digger-pine . - noun Same as
yellow pine . - noun Same as
yellow pine . - noun See
white pine . - noun In England, the long-leafed pine, or its imported wood.
- noun See
celery-pine . - noun See
Chimaphila . - noun See
Dacrydium . - noun The Swiss stone-pine, or arolla, Pinus Cembra, a middle-sized tree with fragrant and resinous, very fine-grained soft wood, much used for carving and cabinet-work. The seeds are edible, and abound in oil. It yields a turpentine called
Carpathian balsam . - noun The Siberian stone-pine, Pinus Cembra, var.
- noun Pinus monticola, a large species of the western United States, not very common, but in Idaho an important timber-tree.
- noun The cedar-pine.
- noun The Rocky Mountain species Pinus reflexa, of Arizona, and P. flexilis, which serves for lumber in Nevada, where better is wanting.
- noun Same as
kahikatea . - noun The long-leafed pine.
- noun An important species, Pinus ponderosa, found in the Black Hills, and from British Columbia, through the Pacific region, to Texas and Mexico: within its range the most valuable timber-tree after the Oregon pine. It sometimes approaches 300 feet in height, but is commonly much lower, especially in the Rocky Mountains. Its heavy, hard, and strong, but not durable, timber furnishes lumber, railway-ties, etc. Also called bull-pine, silver-pine.
- noun Pinus Arizonica, a species of minor importance in the mountains of Arizona.
- noun A commercial name of the common white pine. (See also ground-pine, heavy-pine, hoop-pine, huon-pine, kauri-pine, knee-pine, loblolly-pine, and slash-pine.)
- noun Same as
foxtail-pine (which see, underpine ). - noun See
black pine . - noun Same as
stone-pine in any of the senses. - noun Same as
table-mountain pine (which see, under pine). - noun In New South Wales, a variety of Callitris robusta. See
black pine . - noun A low tree, Pinus contorta, ranging along the Pacific coast from Alaska to northern California and to some extent inland. It has either a compact round head or an open picturesque one which has given rise to the name twisted pine. It seems to grade into the lodge-pole pine. The saccharine cambium is eaten by the Indians. Also
coast scrub-pine . - noun Same as
slash-pine . Alsoshe pitch-pine . - noun Same as
slash-pine . - noun The loblolly-pine.
- noun In the Bahamas, a species of air-plant, Tillandsia Balbisiana. Compare
wild pine , under wild. - noun The black-headed gull, Chroïcocephalus ridibundus. Also
pinemaw . - To pain; afflict; torture; starve; wear out or consume, as with sickness, pain, or grief.
- To grieve for; bemoan; bewail.
- To be consumed with grief or longing; grow thin or waste away with pain, sorrow, or longing; languish: often with away: as, she pined away and died.
- To long; languish with longing desire: usually with for before the object of desire.
- To shrink or “render,” as fish in the process of curing.
- noun Pain; torment; anguish; misery; suffering; wretchedness.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- intransitive verb obsolete To suffer; to be afflicted.
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Comparisons: The Scotch pine is apt to be confused with the _Austrian pine_ (_Pinus austriaca_), because they both have two needles to each cluster.
Studies of Trees Jacob Joshua Levison
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To the north of the Neuse river loams and loose loams are the more frequent upland soils and the growth is loblolly pine (North Carolina pine*
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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Nestled high in pine forests at the foot of a sacred volcano in the western state of Michoacan, the municipality of 26,000 promotes itself as "the world avocado capital."
Brutal drug violence stalks mayors in Mexico Anne-Marie O'Connor 2010
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But the interior, wrapped in windows and handsome in honey-colored heart pine, is designed to pull the outdoors in.
Tom Sietsema on Girasole: A good spot to stop in Virginia's hunt country for good Italian Tom Sietsema 2010
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Not only do they do this type businesss many have been caught taking bodies out of coffins and puting them in pine boxes then reselling the coffins.
Update: WH now says first lady's father not buried at Burr Oak 2009
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Nestled high in pine forests at the foot of a sacred volcano in the western state of Michoacan, the municipality of 26,000 promotes itself as "the world avocado capital."
Mexico's mayors becoming casualties of drug wars; many towns without leaders Anne-Marie O'Connor 2010
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The researchers used satellite imagery to map lodgepole stands attacked by mountain pine beetles, hiked into the areas to confirm the beetle damage and measured fuel loads.
Study: Beetle invasions dampen, not intensify, wildfire risk Bettina Boxall 2010
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Nestled high in pine forests at the foot of a sacred volcano in the western state of Michoacan, the municipality of 26,000 promotes itself as "the world avocado capital."
Mexico's mayors becoming casualties of drug wars; many towns without leaders Anne-Marie O'Connor 2010
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The entire place is swathed in pine walls, floors and counters.
Cator Sparks: J. Crew Conquers The Upper East Side (PHOTOS) Cator Sparks 2010
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But the interior, wrapped in windows and handsome in honey-colored heart pine, is designed to pull the outdoors in.
Tom Sietsema on Girasole: A good spot to stop in Virginia's hunt country for good Italian Tom Sietsema 2010
Prolagus commented on the word pine
The rose upon my balcony the morning air perfuming,
Was leafless all the winter time and pining for the spring.
(William Makepeace Thackeray)
September 11, 2008