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ASPEN |
Poplar |
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POPPLE |
The poplar. |
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ALAMEDA |
Poplar lined promenade |
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ABELE |
White poplar tree |
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POPULAR |
Sought-after poplar is all around you |
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POMPILLION |
An ointment or pomatum made of black poplar buds. |
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POPLAR |
The timber of the tulip tree; -- called also white poplar. |
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FASTIGIATED |
Clustered, parallel, and upright, as the branches of
the Lombardy poplar; pointed. |
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MEMBRANACEOUS |
Thin and rather soft or pliable, as the leaves of
the rose, peach tree, and aspen poplar. |
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TACAMAHACA |
Any tree yielding tacamahac resin, especially, in North
America, the balsam poplar, or balm of Gilead (Populus balsamifera). |
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TREMULOUS |
Shaking; shivering; quivering; as, a tremulous limb; a
tremulous motion of the hand or the lips; the tremulous leaf of the
poplar. |
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POPULIN |
A glycoside, related to salicin, found in the bark of
certain species of the poplar (Populus), and extracted as a sweet white
crystalline substance. |
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SALICIN |
A glucoside found in the bark and leaves of several
species of willow (Salix) and poplar, and extracted as a bitter white
crystalline substance. |
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COTTONWOOD |
An American tree of the genus Populus or poplar, having
the seeds covered with abundant cottonlike hairs; esp., the P.
monilifera and P. angustifolia of the Western United States. |
|
ASP |
One of several species of poplar bearing this name, especially
the Populus tremula, so called from the trembling of its leaves, which
move with the slightest impulse of the air. |
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VICEROY |
... the outer margins. The
larvae feed on willow, poplar, and apple trees. ... |
|
CATKIN |
...of a
slender axis with many unisexual apetalous flowers along its sides, as
in the willow and poplar, and (as to the staminate flowers) in the
... |