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5 definitions found
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Pine
,
n.
1.
Bot.
Any
tree
of
the
coniferous
genus
Pinus
.
See
Pinus
.
Note:
☞
There
are
about
twenty-eight
species
in
the
United
States
,
of
which
the
white pine
(
Pinus Strobus
),
the
Georgia pine
(
Pinus australis
),
the
red pine
(
Pinus resinosa
),
and
the
great
West
Coast
sugar pine
(
Pinus Lambertiana
)
are
among
the
most
valuable
.
The
Scotch pine
or
fir
,
also
called
Norway
or
Riga pine
(
Pinus sylvestris
),
is
the
only
British
species
.
The
nut pine
is
any
pine
tree
,
or
species
of
pine
,
which
bears
large
edible
seeds
.
See
Pinon
.
The
spruces
,
firs
,
larches
,
and
true
cedars
,
though
formerly
considered
pines
,
are
now
commonly
assigned
to
other
genera
.
2.
The
wood
of
the
pine
tree
.
3.
A
pineapple
.
Ground pine
.
Bot.
See
under
Ground
.
Norfolk Island pine
Bot.
,
a
beautiful
coniferous
tree
,
the
Araucaria excelsa
.
Pine barren
,
a
tract
of
infertile
land
which
is
covered
with
pines
. [
Southern
U.S.]
Pine borer
Zool.
,
any
beetle
whose
larv
æ
bore
into
pine
trees
.
Pine finch
.
Zool.
See
Pinefinch
,
in
the
Vocabulary
.
Pine grosbeak
Zool.
,
a
large
grosbeak
(
Pinicola enucleator
),
which
inhabits
the
northern
parts
of
both
hemispheres
.
The
adult
male
is
more
or
less
tinged
with
red
.
Pine lizard
Zool.
,
a
small
,
very
active
,
mottled
gray
lizard
(
Sceloporus undulatus
),
native
of
the
Middle
States
; --
called
also
swift
,
brown scorpion
,
and
alligator
.
Pine marten
.
Zool.
(a)
A
European
weasel
(
Mustela martes
),
called
also
sweet marten
,
and
yellow-breasted marten
.
(b)
The
American
sable
.
See
Sable
.
Pine moth
Zool.
,
any
one
of
several
species
of
small
tortricid
moths
of
the
genus
Retinia
,
whose
larv
æ
burrow
in
the
ends
of
the
branchlets
of
pine
trees
,
often
doing
great
damage
.
Pine mouse
Zool.
,
an
American
wild
mouse
(
Arvicola pinetorum
),
native
of
the
Middle
States
.
It
lives
in
pine
forests
.
Pine needle
Bot.
,
one
of
the
slender
needle-shaped
leaves
of
a
pine
tree
.
See
Pinus
.
Pine-needle wool
.
See
Pine wool
(
below
).
Pine oil
,
an
oil
resembling
turpentine
,
obtained
from
fir
and
pine
trees
,
and
used
in
making
varnishes
and
colors
.
Pine snake
Zool.
,
a
large
harmless
North
American
snake
(
Pituophis melanoleucus
).
It
is
whitish
,
covered
with
brown
blotches
having
black
margins
.
Called
also
bull snake
.
The
Western
pine
snake
(
Pituophis Sayi
)
is
chestnut-brown
,
mottled
with
black
and
orange
.
Pine tree
Bot.
,
a
tree
of
the
genus
Pinus
;
pine
.
Pine-tree money
,
money
coined
in
Massachusetts
in
the
seventeenth
century
,
and
so
called
from
its
bearing
a
figure
of
a
pine
tree
.
The
most
noted
variety
is
the
pine tree shilling
.
Pine weevil
Zool.
,
any
one
of
numerous
species
of
weevils
whose
larv
æ
bore
in
the
wood
of
pine
trees
.
Several
species
are
known
in
both
Europe
and
America
,
belonging
to
the
genera
Pissodes
,
Hylobius
,
etc
.
Pine wool
,
a
fiber
obtained
from
pine
needles
by
steaming
them
.
It
is
prepared
on
a
large
scale
in
some
of
the
Southern
United
States
,
and
has
many
uses
in
the
economic
arts
; --
called
also
pine-needle wool
,
and
pine-wood wool
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Ri·ga fir
Bot.
A
species
of
pine
(
Pinus sylvestris
),
and
its
wood
,
which
affords
a
valuable
timber
; --
called
also
Scotch pine
,
and
red deal
or
yellow deal
.
It
grows
in
all
parts
of
Europe
,
in
the
Caucasus
,
and
in
Siberia
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Syl·vic
a.
Chem.
Of
,
pertaining
to
,
or
resembling
,
pine
or
its
products
;
specifically
,
designating
an
acid
called
also
abeitic
acid
,
which
is
the
chief
ingredient
of
common
resin
(
obtained
from
Pinus sylvestris
,
and
other
species
).
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Veg·e·ta·ble
a.
1.
Of
or
pertaining
to
plants
;
having
the
nature
of
,
or
produced
by
,
plants
;
as
,
a
vegetable
nature
;
vegetable
growths
,
juices
,
etc
.
Blooming
ambrosial
fruit
Of
vegetable
gold
. --
Milton
.
2.
Consisting
of
,
or
comprising
,
plants
;
as
,
the
vegetable
kingdom
.
Vegetable alkali
Chem.
,
an
alkaloid
.
Vegetable brimstone
.
Bot.
See
Vegetable sulphur
,
below
.
Vegetable butter
Bot.
,
a
name
of
several
kinds
of
concrete
vegetable
oil
;
as
that
produced
by
the
Indian
butter
tree
,
the
African
shea
tree
,
and
the
Pentadesma butyracea
,
a
tree
of
the
order
Guttiferae
,
also
African
.
Still
another
kind
is
pressed
from
the
seeds
of
cocoa
(
Theobroma
).
Vegetable flannel
,
a
textile
material
,
manufactured
in
Germany
from
pine-needle
wool
,
a
down
or
fiber
obtained
from
the
leaves
of
the
Pinus sylvestris
.
Vegetable ivory
.
See
Ivory nut
,
under
Ivory
.
Vegetable jelly
.
See
Pectin
.
Vegetable kingdom
.
Nat. Hist.
See
the
last
Phrase
,
below
.
Vegetable leather
.
(a)
Bot.
A
shrubby
West
Indian
spurge
(
Euphorbia punicea
),
with
leathery
foliage
and
crimson
bracts
.
(b)
See
Vegetable leather
,
under
Leather
.
Vegetable marrow
Bot.
,
an
egg-shaped
gourd
,
commonly
eight
to
ten
inches
long
.
It
is
noted
for
the
very
tender
quality
of
its
flesh
,
and
is
a
favorite
culinary
vegetable
in
England
.
It
has
been
said
to
be
of
Persian
origin
,
but
is
now
thought
to
have
been
derived
from
a
form
of
the
American
pumpkin
.
Vegetable oyster
Bot.
,
the
oyster
plant
.
See
under
Oyster
.
Vegetable parchment
,
papyrine
.
Vegetable sheep
Bot.
,
a
white
woolly
plant
(
Raoulia eximia
)
of
New
Zealand
,
which
grows
in
the
form
of
large
fleecy
cushions
on
the
mountains
.
Vegetable silk
,
a
cottonlike
,
fibrous
material
obtained
from
the
coating
of
the
seeds
of
a
Brazilian
tree
(
Chorisia speciosa
).
It
is
used
for
various
purposes
,
as
for
stuffing
cushions
,
and
the
like
,
but
is
incapable
of
being
spun
on
account
of
a
want
of
cohesion
among
the
fibers
.
Vegetable sponge
.
See
1st
Loof
.
Vegetable sulphur
,
the
fine
and
highly
inflammable
spores
of
the
club
moss
(
Lycopodium clavatum
);
witch
meal
.
Vegetable tallow
,
a
substance
resembling
tallow
,
obtained
from
various
plants
;
as
,
Chinese vegetable tallow
,
obtained
from
the
seeds
of
the
tallow
tree
.
Indian vegetable tallow
is
a
name
sometimes
given
to
piney
tallow
.
Vegetable wax
,
a
waxy
excretion
on
the
leaves
or
fruits
of
certain
plants
,
as
the
bayberry
.
Vegetable kingdom
Nat. Hist.
,
that
primary
division
of
living
things
which
includes
all
plants
.
The
classes
of
the
vegetable
kingdom
have
been
grouped
differently
by
various
botanists
.
The
following
is
one
of
the
best
of
the
many
arrangements
of
the
principal
subdivisions
.
I
.
Phaenogamia
(
called
also
Phanerogamia
).
Plants
having
distinct
flowers
and
true
seeds
. { 1.
Dicotyledons
(
called
also
Exogens
). --
Seeds
with
two
or
more
cotyledons
.
Stems
with
the
pith
,
woody
fiber
,
and
bark
concentrically
arranged
.
Divided
into
two
subclasses
:
Angiosperms
,
having
the
woody
fiber
interspersed
with
dotted
or
annular
ducts
,
and
the
seeds
contained
in
a
true
ovary
;
Gymnosperms
,
having
few
or
no
ducts
in
the
woody
fiber
,
and
the
seeds
naked
. 2.
Monocotyledons
(
called
also
Endogens
). --
Seeds
with
single
cotyledon
.
Stems
with
slender
bundles
of
woody
fiber
not
concentrically
arranged
,
and
with
no
true
bark
.}
II
.
Cryptogamia
.
Plants
without
true
flowers
,
and
reproduced
by
minute
spores
of
various
kinds
,
or
by
simple
cell
division
. { 1.
Acrogens
. --
Plants
usually
with
distinct
stems
and
leaves
,
existing
in
two
alternate
conditions
,
one
of
which
is
nonsexual
and
sporophoric
,
the
other
sexual
and
oophoric
.
Divided
into
Vascular Acrogens
,
or
Pteridophyta
,
having
the
sporophoric
plant
conspicuous
and
consisting
partly
of
vascular
tissue
,
as
in
Ferns
,
Lycopods
,
and
Equiseta
,
and
Cellular Acrogens
,
or
Bryophyta
,
having
the
sexual
plant
most
conspicuous
,
but
destitute
of
vascular
tissue
,
as
in
Mosses
and
Scale
Mosses
. 2.
Thallogens
. --
Plants
without
distinct
stem
and
leaves
,
consisting
of
a
simple
or
branched
mass
of
cellular
tissue
,
or
reduced
to
a
single
cell
.
Reproduction
effected
variously
.
Divided
into
Algae
,
which
contain
chlorophyll
or
its
equivalent
,
and
which
live
upon
air
and
water
,
and
Fungi
,
which
contain
no
chlorophyll
,
and
live
on
organic
matter
. (
Lichens
are
now
believed
to
be
fungi
parasitic
on
included
algae
.}
Note:
☞
Many
botanists
divide
the
Phaenogamia
primarily
into
Gymnosperms
and
Angiosperms
,
and
the
latter
into
Dicotyledons
and
Monocotyledons
.
Others
consider
Pteridophyta
and
Bryophyta
to
be
separate
classes
.
Thallogens
are
variously
divided
by
different
writers
,
and
the
places
for
diatoms
,
slime
molds
,
and
stoneworts
are
altogether
uncertain
.
For
definitions
,
see
these
names
in
the
Vocabulary
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
Pinus
sylvestris
n
:
medium
large
2-needled
pine
of
northern
Europe
and
Asia
having
flaking
red-brown
bark
[
syn
:
Scotch pine
, {
Scots
pine
,
Scotch fir
]
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