| tree |
The backbone of the cosmos was believed to be an ash tree called Yggdrasill. This World Tree was the only living inanimate object associated with creation; it was believed that Yggdrasill will outlast both the gods and humans. As a forest culture, Teutonic society created stories that revolved around trees. A tree is permanent, eternal, and earthly but ethereal because it is both part of the Earth and of the heavens.
Ãâó: alandpeters.tripod.com/knightstemplarera1188to1312...
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| tree |
a tall, woody plant, usually with one main stem
Ãâó: www.huntington.org/Education/lessons/BG-DP-vocab.h...
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| tree |
A tree is a graph which is connected but contains no circuits.
Ãâó: www.york.cuny.edu/~wu/jm/Glossary.htm
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| tree |
A perennial plant having a self-supporting woody main stem or trunk which usually develops woody branches. A tree, under the Soil Conservation Act, 1938, includes sapling, shrub and scrub in this definition.
Ãâó: www.privateforestry.org.au/glos_o-z.htm
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| tree |
(Last, Stretching) A last-like wooden form used to keep the shape of shoes when they are not being worn. These are a 19 th century item for shoes, and 18 th century for riding boots.
Ãâó: www.personal.utulsa.edu/~marc-carlson/shoe/RESEARC...
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| tree | finch common in winter in the northern U.S. |
|---|---|
| tree | Eurasian sparrow smaller than the house sparrow |
| tree | any typical arboreal squirrel |
| tree | the base part of a tree that remains standing after the tree has been felled |
| tree | a specialist in treating damaged trees |
| tree | treatment of damaged or decaying trees |
| tree | of Australia and Polynesia |
| tree | bluish-green-and-white North American swallow |
| tree | birds of southeast Asia and East Indies differing from true swifts in having upright crests and nesting in trees |
| tree | arboreal amphibians usually having adhesive disks at the tip of each toe |
| tree | evergreen South American shrub naturalized in United States |
| tree | South American arborescent shrub having pale pink blossoms followed by egg-shaped reddish-brown edible fruit somewhat resembling a tomato in flavor |
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