| salix | Origin: L, the willow. <botany> A genus of trees or shrubs including the willow, osier, and the like, growing usually in wet grounds. A tree or shrub of any kind of willow. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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Synonyms : Cortex Salicis
| Salix |
a large and widespread genus varying in size from small shrubs to large trees: willows
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| Salix |
The willows are deciduous trees and shrubs in the genus Salix, part of the willow family Salicaceae. There are about 350 species in this genus worldwide, found primarily on moist soils in cooler zones in the Northern Hemisphere. The leaves are deciduous, often elongate but round to oval in a few species, and with a serrated margin. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salix
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| salix | a large and widespread genus varying in size from small shrubs to large trees: willows |
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| salix | large willow tree of Eurasia and North Africa having grayish canescent leaves and gray bark |
| salix | Eurasian willow tree having grayish leaves and ascending branches |
| salix | North American willow with grayish silky pubescent leaves that usually blacken in drying |
| salix | European willow having grayish leaves and yellow-orange twigs used in basketry |
| salix | Old World willow with light green leaves cultivated for use in basketry |
| salix | willow of the western United States with leaves like those of peach or almond trees |
| salix | low creeping shrub of Arctic Europe and America |
| salix | willow with long drooping branches and slender leaves native to China |
| salix | hybrid willow usually not strongly weeping in habit |
| salix | North American shrub with whitish canescent leaves |
| salix | much-branched Old World willow having large catkins and relatively large broad leaves |
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