| pinus | <botany> A large genus of evergreen coniferous trees, mostly found in the northern hemisphere. The genus formerly included the firs, spruces, larches, and hemlocks, but is now limited to those trees which have the primary leaves of the branchlets reduced to mere scales, and the secondary ones (pine needles) acicular, and usually in fascicles of two to seven. See Pine. Origin: L, a pine tree. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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Synonyms : Pinus abies, Pinus maritima, Pinus pinaster, Pinus radiata, Pinus tremula
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| pinus |
type genus of the Pinaceae: large genus of true pines
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| pinus | type genus of the Pinaceae: large genus of true pines |
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| pinus | small pine of western North America |
| pinus | small slow-growing upland pine of western United States (Rocky Mountains) having dense branches with fissured rust-brown bark and short needles in bunches of 5 and thorn-tipped cone scales |
| pinus | medium-sized 3-needled pine of United States Pacific coast having a prominent knob on each scale of the cone |
| pinus | slender medium-sized 2-needled pine of eastern North America |
| pinus | very small tree similar to Rocky mountain pinon but having a single needle per fascicle |
| pinus | large 5-needled European pine |
| pinus | small 2- or 3-needled pinon of Mexico and southern Texas |
| pinus | shrubby 2-needled pine of coastal northwestern United States |
| pinus | tall subspecies of lodgepole pine |
| pinus | pine native to Japan and Korea having a wide-spreading irregular crown when mature |
| pinus | large pine of southern United States having short needles in bunches of 2-3 and red-brown bark when mature |
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