Sycamore definitions Webster's 1828 Dictionary SYC'AMORE, n. [Gr. a ... colored and sometimes variegated hard tough elastic wood of a sycamore tree [syn: sycamore, lacewood] 2: any of several trees of the genus Platanus ... leaves and ball-shaped heads of fruits [syn: plane tree, sycamore, platan] 3: Eurasian maple tree with pale grey bark that peels in flakes like that of a sycamore tree; leaves with five ovate lobes yellow in autumn [syn: sycamore, great maple, scottish maple, Acer pseudoplatanus] 4: thick-branched ...
California sycamore definitions WordNet (r) 3.0 (2005) n 1: tall tree ... lobed leaves and ball-shaped clusters of flowers [syn: California sycamore, Platanus racemosa]
Arizona sycamore definitions WordNet (r) 3.0 (2005) n 1: medium-sized ... collective fruits in groups of 3 to 5 [syn: Arizona sycamore, Platanus wrightii]
American sycamore definitions WordNet (r) 3.0 (2005) n 1: very large ... of eastern and central North America to Mexico [syn: American sycamore, American plane, buttonwood, Platanus occidentalis]
... edible but inferior figs on short leafless twigs; the biblical sycamore [syn: sycamore, sycamore fig, mulberry fig, Ficus sycomorus] Webster's 1913 Dictionary Sycamore Syc"a*more, n. [L. sycomorus, Gr. ? the fig mulberry ... It is found in Egypt and Syria, and is the sycamore, or sycamine, of Scripture. (b) The American plane tree, or ...
sycomore definitions Merriam Webster's noun see sycamore 1 Oxford Reference Dictionary n. Bot. = SYCAMORE 3. Etymology: ME f. OF sic(h)amor f. L ... sukomoros f. sukon fig + moron mulberry Webster's 1913 Dictionary Sycamore Syc"a*more, n. [L. sycomorus, Gr. ? the fig mulberry ... It is found in Egypt and Syria, and is the sycamore, or sycamine, of Scripture. (b) The American plane tree, or ...
Sycamine definitions Webster's 1828 Dictionary SYCAMINE. [See Sycamore.] Merriam Webster's noun Etymology: Latin sycaminus, from Greek sykaminos ... of Semitic origin; akin to Hebrew shiqm?h mulberry tree, sycamore Date: 1526 a tree of the Bible that is usually ... L sycaminus f. Gk sukaminos mulberry-tree f. Heb. sikmah sycamore, assim. to Gk sukon fig Webster's 1913 Dictionary Sycamine ... mine, n. [L. sycaminus, Gr. ?; perhaps of Semitic origin.] See Sycamore.
... of eastern and central North America to Mexico [syn: American sycamore, American plane, buttonwood, Platanus occidentalis] Webster's 1913 Dictionary Plane ... a native of North America, where it is popularly called sycamore, buttonwood, and buttonball, names also applied to the California species ... buttonball tree, and, in some parts of the United States, sycamore. The California buttonwood is P. racemosa.
... of eastern and central North America to Mexico [syn: American sycamore, American plane, buttonwood, Platanus occidentalis] Merriam Webster's noun Date ... a native of North America, where it is popularly called sycamore, buttonwood, and buttonball, names also applied to the California species ... buttonball tree, and, in some parts of the United States, sycamore. The California buttonwood is P. racemosa.
... State ILLINOIS County DE KALB County State IL City Name SYCAMORE Full Name SYCAMORE FIRE DEPT Owner Type PR Facility Use PR Facility City, State, Zip "SYCAMORE, IL 60178" Elevation 825 Aeronautical chart on which the airport ...
... wild flora is similar to that of the mountains. The sycamore fig (Arabic jummeiz) flourishes around Jaffa--it is a tree ... of the distinctions between "lower" and "upper" Galilee that the sycamore fig flourished in the former and not in the latter ... evident it was far more plentiful in olden times (see SYCAMORE). A closely allied tree, the mulberry, is common everywhere, though ...
... the onion, garlic, cucumber, melon and radish; the sont acacia, sycamore and tamarisk; the flax, henna and clover; and for ornament ... to the visit of the Virgin and Child. The great sycamore tree here is the successor of that under which the ... food, and were partly fed by the goddess in the sycamore tree. They therefore needed to have plates of food and ...