Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun Any of various trees having soft lightweight wood, especially.
  • noun A deciduous shrub or small tree (Leitneria floridana) native to wet regions of the southeast United States.
  • noun Any of certain Australian shrubs or small trees of the genus Duboisia having leaves used for the commercial extraction of belladonna alkaloids.
  • noun The wood of any of these trees.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun One of several West Indian trees with light or porous wood, as the Anona palustris, Ochroma Lagopus, Paritium tiliaceum, and Pisonia obtusata.
  • noun In Australia, any one of several trees having very light or soft and easily worked wood, or the wood itself.
  • noun See whau.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun obsolete The wood of the cork oak.
  • noun Any one of several trees or shrubs having light or corky wood
  • noun In the United States, the tree Leitneria floridana, a very small deciduous dioecious tree or shrub of damp habitats in the southeastern US having extremely light wood; -- called also the corkwood tree.
  • noun In the West Indies: (1) Either of the cotton trees Ochroma lagopus and Pariti tiliaceum.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun A small shrub of the south-eastern United States.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun very small deciduous dioecious tree or shrub of damp habitats in southeastern United States having extremely light wood

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

cork +‎ wood

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Examples

  • Rounding a bend past a corkwood copse, I had to swerve to avoid an extinct Holden smack in the middle of the track.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

  • Rounding a bend past a corkwood copse, I had to swerve to avoid an extinct Holden smack in the middle of the track.

    Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009

  • Everything bore a peculiar hue of green, from the groves of myrtle, pimento and corkwood to the grassy plots, the natural fields of oats and even to the moss-covered rocks of the spinelike mountains.

    Jack North's Treasure Hunt Or, Daring Adventures in South America Roy Rockwood

  • Another road, little better than a bridle - path, runs northward to Ximena and through the corkwood forests of that plain towards the mountain ranges that rise between Ronda and the sea.

    In Kedar's Tents Henry Seton Merriman 1882

  • A few quandongs, or native peach trees, exist amongst these gullies; also a tree that I only know by the name of the corkwood tree.

    Australia Twice Traversed, Illustrated, Ernest Giles 1866

  • He is obstructed from a mercerized degree online psychology and he grivet for hauling to haiti his corkwood if inattentively else.

    Rational Review 2009

  • The researchers recommend scopolamine, which is extracted from the corkwood tree, as the first-line antispasmodic treatment for IBS.

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2008

  • The researchers recommend scopolamine, which is extracted from the corkwood tree, as the first-line antispasmodic treatment for IBS.

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2008

  • The researchers recommend scopolamine, which is extracted from the corkwood tree, as the first-line antispasmodic treatment for IBS.

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2008

  • The researchers recommend scopolamine, which is extracted from the corkwood tree, as the first-line antispasmodic treatment for IBS.

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2008

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