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单词 tree
释义

treen.

Brit. /triː/, U.S. /tri/
Forms: 1. nominative singular Old English triow, Old English tryw (late), Old English–Middle English treow, Old English–Middle English treu, Old English Middle English trew, Old English–Middle English treo, Middle English–1500s tre, Middle English– tree; Middle English trau (Kent), Middle English tra(u)w (Kent); Middle English trough; Middle English trey (Scottish), 1500s–1600s trie. dative Old English treowe, Old English tréo, Middle English treuwe, Middle English trewe, Middle English trow(e, Middle English trauwe. [The development of Old English nominative accusative singular was Old Germanic*trewom, trewa, trew, tréu, tréo, then with w from oblique cases (trewes, treowes, etc.), tréow, (triow).]c890 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) ii. xi. [xiv.] 138 He..of treo [v.r. treowe] cirican getimbrode.c897 K. Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care xlv. 338 Ælc triow [v.r. treow] man sceal ceorfan.c1000 West Saxon Gospels: Matt. (Corpus Cambr.) iii. 10 Ælc treow [MS. B. tryw, Lind. treu] þe godne wæstm ne bringð.c1200 Vices & Virt. 27 Ðe treu of paradise.c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 107 Of coren of eorðe, and of treuwe.c1220 Bestiary 674 Ðus fel adam ðurȝ a tre, Vre firste fader, ðat fele we.a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3301 A funden trew ðor-inne dede Moyses.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 28 Ne in gerse, ne in busse, ne in trauwe.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 95 Þet trau of lyue.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 202 Þys traw wext and profiteþ.1393 W. Langland Piers Plowman C. xxi. 200 Yf þei touchede þe treo and of þe frut eten.a1400 K. Alis. 6829 Alle tho That scholde with him to the trough go.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 657 Þis tree ys done in my friþe.1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) II. 687 With the speir that wes of suir trie, He hit the king richt in at the e.a1550 in R. Dyboski Songs, Carols & Other Misc. Poems (1908) 129 Son crokith the tre, that crokid will be.1573 T. Tusser Fiue Hundreth Points Good Husbandry (new ed.) f. 46 Let Iuye be killed, or tree wilbe spilled.1597 A. Montgomerie Cherrie & Slae 327 The trie so hich of growth. 2. nominative plural

α. Old English trēo, Old English treow, Old English triowu, Old English treowu, Old English -a, Old English–Middle English treowe; Middle English trowen, Middle English treon, Middle English–1500s trēn, Middle English troen, Middle English trene, Middle English–1600s (1800s– dialect) treen, Middle English trenne, Middle English–1500s treene.

β. Middle English treos, Middle English trewwes ( Orm.), Middle English trewes, Middle English tres, Middle English troues, Middle English trouwes, Middle English treus, Middle English trews, Middle English trowes, Middle English traues, Middle English trawes, Middle English–1500s treis, Middle English trese, 1500s treys, 1500s treyis (Scottish), 1500s–1600s tries, Middle English– trees.

[The development of Old English nominative accusative plural was West Germanictrewu, tréu, tréo; then again with w (from oblique cases), tréow, treowu (-a). The plural tréo occurs in Vesp. Ps. and Lind. Gosp.]c825 Vesp. Ps. cxlviii. 9 Treo westemberu and alle cederbeamas.c890 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) i. 26 Hit is welig þis ealond on wæstmum & on treowum.c897 K. Ælfred tr. Gregory Pastoral Care xl. 292 Sumu treowu he watrade.a1000 Epist. Alex. ad Aristot. in Cockayne Narrat. 27 Eac þær wæron oþre treow.a1000 Epist. Alex. ad Aristot. in Cockayne Narrat. 28 Ða halgan triow-swiðe wepen.c1000 Ælfric Homilies II. 588 Deorwurðe stanas, oþþe treowa.c1175 Lamb. Hom. 5 Heo stiȝen uppe on þe godes cunnes treowe.c1175 Lamb. Hom. 41 He him sceawede heȝe treon.c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 15468 Off gresess. & off tres.c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 14 Full gode treos inoȝhe.c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 25 Gres and trowen.c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 37 Hwile uppen trewes.c1275 Laȝamon Brut 511 Alle hi solde hongie vppe heȝe troues.?a1300 XI Pains of Hell 33 Þer beoþ bernynde treon.a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 3305 Then [i.e. ten] and sexti palme-tren.a1325 Statutes of Realm (2011) xiii. 68 Þis statut ne portenez noȝt to grete hokes, ne to oþere grete troen.a1325 Prose Psalter xcv[i]. 12 Þan shul alle þe trews of þe wodes gladen.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 25 Þe greatte traues.1340 Ayenbite (1866) 95 Uol of guode trawes.a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1871) III. 445 Where þou knowe nouȝt þe treen [v.r. tren].a1400 K. Alis. 6763 Þou shalt fynde trowes two.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 651 Of treis..here es gode wone.a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 545 It groues tres [Fairf. trees] and gress.a1400 Pistill of Susan 90 Turtils troned on trene.c1400 Ywaine & Gaw. 2965 He loked in bitwix the trese.c1430 J. Lydgate Minor Poems (Percy Soc.) 17 Twoo grene treene there grewe uprighte.a1450 J. Myrc Festial i. 3 Treus and herbys.a1500 ( J. Yonge tr. Secreta Secret. (Rawl.) (1898) 243 The humours of tren and herbis.a1500 ( J. Yonge tr. Secreta Secret. (Rawl.) (1898) 239 With lewys of trenne. c1540Trees [see sense 1a]. 1562–3 in R. Willis & J. W. Clark Archit. Hist. Univ. Cambr. (1886) II. 568 x greate tries at xxviijs the trie.1563 T. Sackville in W. Baldwin et al. Myrrour for Magistrates (new ed.) Induct. 2 With blustring blastes had al ybared the treen.1565 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. i. 45 Wynter windes..that doth I-bayre the tren.1570 in J. Cranstoun Satirical Poems Reformation (1891) I. xv. 50 All greinis and plesand treis [rhyme eyis].1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 17 Aple tries, and orchardis.1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne iii. lxxv. 54 The shadie tops of shaking treene. 1635 [see sense 1a]. 1771 [see sense 1a]. 1843 E. Jones Stud. Sensation & Event 38 Vast interbranching treen. 1861 [see sense 1a].

Etymology: Old English tréow , tríow , Old English, Middle English tréo, etc. = Old Frisian trê (North Frisian trê , træ̂ ), Old Saxon trio , treo , trew- (Middle Dutch in combination -tere , -tære , Kilian); Old Norse tré (Danish træ , Swedish trä timber, träd tree); Gothic triu , genitive triw-is wood (wanting in Old High German and now also obsolete in Low German and Dutch) < Old Germanic *trewo- , cognate with Sanskrit dru tree, wood, ˈdāru wood, log, and with Greek δρῦς oak, δόρυ spear; Old Slavonic drievo ( < dervo ) tree, wood, drŭva plural wood, Russian ˈderevo , dreˈvo tree, wood, Serbian drvo tree, drva wood, Czech drva , Polish drwa wood; Lithuanian dervà pine-wood; also with Old Irish daur , Welsh derwen oak. The modern English tree is a regular representation of Old English tréo , Middle English treo ; trē is the form in the Bestiary of c1220; but the final prevalence of this over the other Middle English forms treow , trew , trow , trau , was probably assisted by its coincidence with Norse tré ; trē , tree are the northern forms from Cursor Mundi onward. For form-history compare knee n.
Signification.
1.
a. A perennial plant having a self-supporting woody main stem or trunk (which usually develops woody branches at some distance from the ground), and growing to a considerable height and size. (Usually distinguished from a bush or shrub by size and manner of growth; but cf. 1b.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > [noun]
woodc725
treec825
cedar beamc1000
wood-plant1773
woody plant1830
maiden bark1831
muti1858
c825 [see forms]. c890 [see forms]. c897 [see forms].
c1000 Ælfric Genesis iii. 6 Þæt treow wæs god to etanne.
c1175 Lamb. Hom. 109 Iliche þan treo þe bereð lef and blosman.
c1290 St. Brendan 41 in S. Eng. Leg. I. 221 Of treon and herbes, þikke i-novȝ.
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xv. 327 A forest..ful of faire trees.
1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomew de Glanville De Proprietatibus Rerum xvii. i. (Tollem. MS.) A tre haþ..þe rynde, bowes, twigges, leues, blosmes, floures and frute.
1481 W. Caxton tr. Hist. Reynard Fox (1970) 27 He brake a rodde of a tree.
c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 12467 Trees thurgh tempestes tynde hade þere leues.
a1550 in R. Dyboski Songs, Carols & Other Misc. Poems (1908) 128 Hit is a febill tre that fallith at the first strok.
1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne vii. i. 117 Through forrests thicke among the shadie treene.
1635 W. Laud Diary 1 Dec. Many elm leaves yet upon the trees.
1771 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. lvii. 254 He or his deputy were authorised to cut down..trees.
1861 R. Bentley Man. Bot. ii. iii. 540 Cunoniaceæ... Nearly allied to Saxifragaceæ, but differing from them in being trees or shrubs.
b. Extended to include bushes or shrubs of erect growth and having a single stem; and even some perennial herbaceous plants which grow to a great height, as the banana and plantain.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > characterized by habit > [noun] > shrub or bush
shrub972
bosk1297
bushc1315
treec1350
scrub1398
boce1482
shrag1552
virgult?1553
tod1563
risp1567
bush-tuft1586
frutex1664
scrub-tree1749
c1350 in Trans. Philol. Soc. (1906) 667 If, roser et cenelere, hw, rosetre and hawetre.
?1533 G. Du Wes Introductorie for to lerne Frenche sig. Di v Gowsbery tre, groiselier.
1640 J. Parkinson Theatrum Botanicum xvi. lxix. 1495 Musa arbor. The Indian Figge or Plantaine tree.
1649 Surv. Manor Wimbledon in Archæol. X. 424 The borders of which grass plots are coran trees.
1697 W. Dampier New Voy. around World xi. 316 The Bonano Tree is exactly like the Plantain.
1765 Chron. in Ann. Reg. 140/2 Some rasberry trees in perfect leaf.
1855 R. Browning Women & Roses i I dream of a red-rose tree.
1858 R. Hogg Veg. Kingdom 790 As a food, the Plantain is wholesome and agreeable. A tree generally contains three or four clusters.
c. Applied figuratively or allusively to a person.
ΚΠ
1597 W. Shakespeare Richard III iii. vii. 157 The roiall tree hath left vs roiall fruit. View more context for this quotation
1815 W. Wordsworth Poems II. 148 He was a Tree that stood alone, And proudly did its branches wave.
d. = Christmas tree n.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > social event > festive occasion > specific festivities > [noun] > festivities associated with Christmas > articles associated with
hollyc1150
Christmas lights1597
mince pie1604
Christmas puddingc1650
Christmas present1663
Christmas gift1751
Christmas decoration1818
Christmas tree1826
tree1851
wesley-bob1859
Christmas card1860
bauble1862
Advent calendar1867
1838 H. Martineau Retrospect of Western Trav. III. 182 I was present at the introduction into the new country of..the German Christmas-tree... The tree was the top of a young fir, planted in a tub.]
1851 E. Ruskin Let. 28 Dec. in Effie in Venice (1965) ii. 236 They wanted me to come in the evening when the tree was lighted to see the presents all divided.
1945 N. Mitford Pursuit of Love iii. 23 We got back late for the tree... Uncle Matthew..was struggling into his Father Christmas clothes!
1979 M. McCarthy Cannibals & Missionaries i. 19 Distribution of presents..and the darned crèche and parish-house tree to set up.
2. The substance of the trunk and boughs of a tree; wood (esp. as a material of which things are made); timber. Obsolete or archaic.to go between the bark and the tree: see bark n.1 6a.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > [noun]
treec890
woodc897
timbera1100
mattera1382
stuff1544
lignum1826
c890 tr. Bede Eccl. Hist. (1890) ii. xi. [xiv.] 138 He þær hræde geweorce of treo cirican getimbrode.
c1122 Anglo-Saxon Chron. ann. 626 (Laud) Þær he ær het getimbrian cyrican of treowe.
c1290 S. Eng. Leg. I. 91/154 In one cheste of treo.
c1440 Partonope 407 A brygge of stone and not of tree.
c1503 R. Arnold Chron. f. liv/2 Affixed wt nayles of Irne or of tree.
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour iii. xvii. sig. divv Eatyng his meate in a disshe of tree.
1603 Prophecie of Bertlington in Whole Prophesie Scotl. sig. A8 At Aberladie he shal light, With hempin halters and hors of tree.
1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 124 A horse made of maple tree.
1896 R. Kipling Sea-wife in Seven Seas 100 To ride the horse of tree [sc. a ship].
3. A piece of wood; a stem or branch of a tree, or a portion of one, either in its natural state, or more usually (now always) shaped for some purpose.
a. A pole, post, stake, beam, wooden bar, etc.; esp. (now only) one forming part of some structure, as a vehicle, plough, ship, etc.; usually as the second element in combinations, as axle-tree n., chess-tree n., cross-tree n., door-tree n., draught-tree n., roof-tree n., swingletree n., etc.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > types of tools generally > [noun] > in form of bar, pole, rod, etc.
stingc725
stakec893
sowelc900
tree971
rungOE
shaftc1000
staffc1000
stockc1000
poleOE
spritOE
luga1250
lever1297
stanga1300
perchc1300
raftc1330
sheltbeam1336
stower1371
palea1382
spar1388
spire1392
perk1396
ragged staff1397
peela1400
slot1399
plantc1400
heck-stower1401
sparkin1408
cammockc1425
sallow stakec1440
spoke1467
perk treec1480
yard1480
bode1483
spit1485
bolm1513
gada1535
ruttock1542
stob1550
blade1558
wattle1570
bamboo1598
loggat1600
barling1611
sparret1632
picket1687
tringle1706
sprund1736
lug-pole1773
polting lug1789
baton1801
stuckin1809
rack-pin1821
picket-pin1844
I-iron1874
pricker1875
stag1881
podger1888
window pole1888
verge1897
sallow pole1898
lat1899
swizzle-stick1962
971 Blickl. Hom. 187 Ond þa æfter þon het Neron gewyrcean mycelne tor of treowum & of mycclum beamum.
c1175 Ormulum (Burchfield transcript) l. 15835 Þatt temmple þatt wass wrohht. Off trewwess & off staness.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 12399 Þe knaue þat þis timber fett..ouer scort he broght a tre.
1487 (a1380) J. Barbour Bruce (St. John's Cambr.) xiii. 238 Schetis..Thai festnyt in steid of baneris Apon lang treis and on speris.
?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. ii The sharebeam is the tre vnderneth, whervpon the share is set.
?1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Husbandry f. ii The plogh beame, is the long tre aboue.
1642 in J. Watson Jedburgh Abbey (1894) 85 Thrie scoir singill tries, threttie double tries, two hundred daills to be scaffolding and centtries.
1787 MS. Deed Such trees and pipes as are now laid for conveying water from the said spring.
1848 C. Kingsley Night Bird 4 All night I heard a singing bird Upon the topmast tree.
1887 D. Donaldson Jamieson's Sc. Dict. Suppl. (at cited word) A straight piece of rough timber used as a pole, lever, prop, or stay, is called a tree; as, a dyer's-tree, a raising-tree or lever for moving a mill-stone.
b. A stick, esp. a staff, cudgel: cf. plant n.1 1b. Obsolete exc. Scottish.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > club or stick > [noun]
sowelc893
treec893
cudgelc897
stinga900
bat?c1225
sticka1275
clubc1275
truncheon14..
bourdonc1325
bastona1400
warderera1400
plantc1400
kibble1411
playloomc1440
hurlbatc1450
ploykc1450
rung1491
libberlac1500
waster1533
batonc1550
macana1555
libbet1562
bastinado1574
crab-tree comb1593
tomahawkc1612
billeta1616
wiper1622
batoon1637
gibbeta1640
crab-bat1647
kibbo1688
Indian club1694
batterdasher1696
crab-stick1703
bloodwipea1705
bludgeon1730
kierie1731
oaken towel1739
crab1740
shillelagh1772
knobstick1783
pogamogganc1788
whirlbat1791
nulla-nulla1798
waddy1800
kevel1807
supple1815
mere1820
hurlet1825
knobkerrie1826
blackthorn1829
bastera1833
twig1842
leangle1845
alpeen1847
banger1849
billy1856
thwack-stave1857
clump1868
cosh1869
nulla1878
sap1899
waddy1899
blunt instrument1923
c893 tr. Orosius Hist. iv. i. §6 Hie namon treowu, & slogon on oþerne ende monige scearpe isene næglas.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 294 Lauerd quod ha to elye..lo ich gedere twa treon.
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 12965 His fur he beten a-gon & muchele treowen [c1300 Otho trouwes] læiden on.
c1450 (c1400) Emaré (1908) 365 She was wax lene as a tre.
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) ii. l. 97 A huntyn staff in-till his hand he bar. Thar-with he smat on Willȝham Wallace thair, Bot for his tre litill sonȝhe he maid.
1588 Reg. Privy Council Scott. 1st Ser. IV. 270 The said Robert Lekky..maliciouslie straik and dang thame with rungis and treis.
c1680 Songs of Scotl. (1893) 43 I am a puir silly auld man, And hirplin' ower a tree.
1825 Willie Wallace in P. Buchan Gleanings Old Ballads 115 He's gone to the West-muir wood, And there he's pull'd a trusty tree.
4.
a. The cross on which Christ was crucified, the holy rood. archaic and poetic.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > biblical events > [noun] > crucifixion > instruments of crucifixion > the cross
roodOE
beamOE
rood-treeOE
treeOE
crouchc1000
holy roodOE
crossc1275
Holy crossc1290
gibbetc1450
cross patif1543
OE Dream of Rood 25 Hwæðre ic þær licgende lange hwile beheold hreowcearig hælendes treow, oððæt ic gehyrde þæt hit hleoðrode.
c1275 On Serving Christ 30 in Old Eng. Misc. 91 As he for monkunnes neodes don wes on þe treo.
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) 1 Pet. ii. 24 He..suffride, [gloss] or bar, oure synnes in his body on the tree.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds v. 30 The God of oure fadris reyside Jhesu, whom ȝe slowen, hangynge in a tree [1526 Tyndale and hanged on tree].
a1464 J. Capgrave Abbreuiacion of Cron. (Cambr. Gg.4.12) (1983) 84 A nayle, with whech oure Lord was nayled to þe tre.
1596 R. Cotton Armor of Proofe sig. B2v Christ,..who did our sinnes and foes to tree fast binde.
1635 E. Pagitt Christianographie (1636) iii. 52 Helena the Empresse found the Crosse, and adored the King, but not the Tree.
1707 I. Watts Hymns & Spiritual Songs ii. 86 Was it for Crimes that I had done He groan'd upon the Tree?
1815 T. Kelly Hymns (hymn) 54 He bears our sins upon the tree.
b. A gallows. Also †dry tree, Tyburn tree.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > capital punishment > hanging > [noun] > gallows
gallowsOE
gallows-treea1000
warytre?a1200
gibbet?c1225
gallow-forka1250
forkc1275
juisec1320
forchesc1380
crossa1382
treec1425
patible1428
justice1484
potencec1500
haltera1533
turning-tree1548
potentc1550
three treesa1566
chates1567
mare1568
furel1587
bough1590
gibe1590
derrickc1600
hangrella1605
cross-tree1638
Gregorian tree1641
wooden horse1642
timber-marec1650
triple tree1651
furca1653
nubbing1673
a horse that was foaled of an acorn1678
nub1699
Tyburn tree1728
raven-stone1738
picture frame1785
crap1789
lamp-iron1790
Moll Blood1818
stifler1818
scragging-post1819
government signposta1828
leafless tree1830
shuggie-shue1836
doom-tree1837
stob1860–62
c1425 Cast. Persev. 177 in Macro Plays 82 Pyncecras, Parys, & longe Pygmayne, And euery toun in Trage, euyn to þe dreye tre.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 148 Sum..nevir fra taking can hald his hand, Quhill he be tit vp to ane tre.
c1515 Ld. Berners tr. Bk. Duke Huon of Burdeux (1882–7) xviii. 49 Not lettynge for fere of any deth, though it be to go to the dry tre.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Esther vi. A To hange Mardocheus on ye tre, yt he had prepared for him.
1609 B. Jonson Masque of Queens ad init. From the dungeon, from the tree That they die on, here are we [witches]!
a1704 T. Brown Satire upon Quack in Wks. (1720) I. 70 Though 'twas thy Luck to cheat the fatal Tree.
1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian iii*, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. I. 87 The area of the Grassmarket..in the centre of which arose the fatal tree, tall, black, and ominous, from which dangled the deadly halter.
1847 C. Kingsley Outlaw x And when I'm taen and hangit,..ye'll steal me frae the tree.
5.
a. The wooden shaft of a spear, handle of an implement, etc.; hence, a spear, lance (in to break a tree). Now dialect.
ΘΚΠ
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > sharp weapon > spear or lance > [noun] > shaft of spear
spear-shafta900
ashOE
shaftc1000
truncheon13..
tree?a1366
timberc1400
sting?a1500
spear-staff1530
steal1530
rodc1540
stale1553
stave1873
staff-
society > armed hostility > military equipment > weapon > missile > arrow > [noun] > shaft of arrow
shaftc1000
tree?a1366
arrow shaft1373
steal1530
stale1553
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > fighting sports > jousting or tilting > joust or tilt [verb (intransitive)]
playeOE
bourdisec1320
joustc1330
copec1350
tourney1390
coup?a1400
joustenc1400
to joust of warc1400
to run togetherc1410
bourda1500
to fight at barriers1532
runa1533
to run at (the) tilt1548
jostle1580
tilt1595
to break a treea1600
to run (or ride) a-tilt1608
to run tilt1831
society > occupation and work > equipment > tool > parts of tools generally > [noun] > handle
handleeOE
helvec897
haftc1000
steal1377
start1380
handa1400
helmc1430
handlinga1450
pull1551
grasp1561
hilt1574
cronge1577
hold1578
tab1607
manubrium1609
tree1611
handfast1638
stock1695
handing1703
gripe1748
stem1796
handhold1797
grip1867
?a1366 Romaunt Rose 948 Ten brode arowis hilde he there,..But iren was ther noon ne stelle, For al was golde,..Outake the fetheres & the tree.
c1400 Laud Troy-bk. 12697 He was wounded with a spere..Hede & tre lefft bothe In him.
a1600 A. Montgomerie Misc. Poems xlix. 24 We dout not bot they [thy knights] dar..be bold to brek a tre.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Abrier d'Arbeleste, the tree of a Crossebow.
1765 Museum Rusticum 3 240 The person should have a spade..about four inches broad, and eighteen inches long in the bit,..with a tree in it of three feet six inches long.
1881 S. Evans Evans's Leicestershire Words (new ed.) Tree, a wooden handle or stail.
b. A wooden structure; applied poetically or rhetorical to a ship; in quot. 1513 to the wooden horse at the siege of Troy. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > [noun]
shipc725
beamOE
boardOE
bargea1300
steera1300
vessela1300
treea1382
loomc1400
man1473
ark1477
bottom1490
keela1547
riverboat1565
craft1578
pine1592
class1596
flood-bickerer1599
pitchboard1599
stern-bearer1599
wooden horse1599
wooden isle1603
water treader?1615
water house1616
watercraft1618
machine1637
prore1642
lightman1666
embarkation1690
bark1756
prowa1771
Mudian1813
bastiment1823
hooker1823
nymph1876
M.F.V.1948
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Wisd. xiv. 1 Another thenkende to seilen,..the tree berende hym.
1513 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid ii. i. 60 In this tree ar Grekis closit.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Wisd. x. 4 Whan ye water destroyed ye whole worlde, wyszdome preserued the righteous thorow a poore tre.
1594 C. Marlowe & T. Nashe Dido iv. iv Here's Aeneas' tackling, oars, and sails... Oh, cursed tree, hadst thou but wit or sense, To measure how I prize Aeneas' love.
c. A wooden vessel; barrel, cask, ‘the wood’. Scottish.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > containers for drink > [noun] > large for liquor
jubbec1386
hogshead1390
justc1400
keel1485
muida1492
tree1513
quarter pipe?1763
cistern1815
wood1822
ox-head1888
1513 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1902) IV. 487 Item to hir in aile, full to seywart xxiiij last and a barrell,..ilk barrell contenand xij gallonis, price of the galloune xx d; summa of the last with the tree..xiij li. viij s.
1532 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1905) VI. 156 xij ½ barrellis of aill, ilk barrell contenand v gallonis... Item, for xij treis to put the samyn intill, for ilk tree xviij d.
1656 T. Tucker Rep. Revenues Scot. (Bannatyne Club) 10 The Scots use noe certaine vessells, but such as by a generall terme they call Trees,..some holding more or lesse gallons the tree.
a1814 J. Ramsay Scotl. & Scotsmen 18th Cent. (1888) II. viii. 78 The scourging a nine-gallon tree..consisted in drawing the spigot of a barrel of ale, and never quitting it..till it was drunk out.
d. The framework of a saddle: = saddle-tree n., see for earlier quots.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > horse-gear > [noun] > saddle > parts of saddle
saddle-boweOE
arsonc1300
saddle skirt1361
saddle-tree1364
skirtc1400
saddle panel1465
stock-tree1470
stock1497
pommela1500
tree1535
pillion cloth1540
port1548
saddle stock1548
pilch1552
bolster1591
cantle1591
shank-pilliona1599
pillowc1600
pad1604
crutch1607
sivet1607
saddle crutcha1614
saddle eaves1663
saddle tore1681
burr1688
head1688
narve1688
saddle seat1688
sidebar1688
torea1694
quarter1735
bands of a saddle1753
witherband1764
withers1764
peak1775
pillion-stick1784
boot-housing1792
saddle flap1798
saddle lap1803
fork1833
flap1849
horn1849
skirting1852
hunting-horn1854
head-plate1855
saddle horn1856
cantle bar1859
leaping-horn1859
straining1871
stirrup-bar1875
straining-leather1875
spring tree1877
leaping-head1881
officer-tree1894
monkey1911
monkey-strap1915
thigh roll1963
straining-web-
1535 W. Stewart tr. H. Boethius Bk. Cron. Scotl. (1858) III. 300 Ane hors he fand..Without saidill, curpall, tre, or brydill.
1591 R. Greene Second Pt. Conny-catching sig. A2 His saddle is made without any tree.
1665 T. Herbert Some Years Trav. (new ed.) 314 Saddles of the better sort are usually of Velvet;..the trees are curiously painted.
1737 H. Bracken Farriery Improved xli. 559 If the Saddle be too narrow in the Tree.
1862 Catal. Internat. Exhib., Brit. II. No. 4721 Elliptical spring-seat saddle, and tree showing action of spring.
e. A block upon which a boot is shaped or stretched: = boot-tree n. at boot n.3 Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making footwear > [noun] > equipment or materials for > equipment > last
tree1541
boot-last1611
shoe-last1647
boot-tree1766
shoe-tree1827
hobbing foot1866
shoe-stretcher1875
hobbing boot1907
1541 in F. Collins Wills & Admin. Knaresborough Court Rolls (1902) I. 35 ij paire of boytte treys.
1596 T. Nashe Haue with you to Saffron-Walden sig. C2 Rayse thy conceipt on the trees, or..new corke it at the heeles, before it should thus walke bare-foote.
1766 T. H. Croker et al. Compl. Dict. Arts & Sci. Boot-Tree, or Boot-Last, is a wooden cylinder slit into two parts, between which, when it is put into the boot, they drive..a wedge.
1839 W. M. Thackeray Fatal Boots Nov. As I was polishing on the trees a pair of boots.
1891 R. Kipling Light that Failed viii. 144 As Dick..busied himself among the former's boots and trees.
6. Something resembling a tree with its branches.
a. A diagram or table of a family, indicating its original ancestor as the root, and the various branches of descendants; in full, family tree or genealogical tree. Also figurative a family, race, stock.Porphyrian tree (Logic): see Porphyrian tree n. at Porphyrian adj.1 and n. Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > kinship or relationship > lineage or descent > genealogy as study > [noun] > genealogical record > tree, diagram, etc.
tree1297
pedigreec1425
Jesse1463
kindred's tree1605
birth brief1662
family tree1752
pedigree-stick1893
stemma1904
1297 R. Gloucester's Chron. (Rolls) 7255 Þo smot uerst þis tre aȝen to is kunde more [i.e. natural root].
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) l. 1625 Bot first a tre,..I sal sette hire [Trin. Cambr. here] of adam kin.
1693 G. Stepney tr. Juvenal in J. Dryden et al. tr. Juvenal Satires viii. 147 Vain are their Hopes, who fancy to inherit By Trees of Pedigrees, or Fame, or Merit.
1782 H. Walpole Vertue's Anecd. Painting (ed. 3) V. 303 Two genealogic trees.
1825 T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. II. 179 A more honourable tree does not flourish in the archives of heraldry than ours.
1858 M. Arnold Merope 865 So dies the last shoot of our royal tree!
b. Any structure or figure, natural or artificial, of branched form.spec. (a) (tr. arbor in medieval Latin phrases). An arborescent mass of crystals forming from a solution, as of silver (Tree of Diana n. at Diana n. 2), of lead (Saturn's tree n. at Saturn n. Compounds), etc. (b) Applied to the spinal nervous system, consisting of the spinal cord and the nerves branching out from it. More widely, any branching system of vessels or organs in the body. (c) A branched respiratory organ in Holothurians. (d) A worked design of tree-like form. (e) Mathematics. A figure or diagram consisting of branching lines; (also in Linguistics, etc.) a set of items that can be represented by such a diagram. (f) Oil Industry (see quot. 1954); cf. Christmas tree n. 3b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > shape > other specific shapes > [noun] > object or figure branched like tree
tree1706
arborification1809
the world > matter > chemistry > crystallography (general) > crystal (general) > crystal habit > [noun] > tree-like
tree1706
arborization1794
tree of Dianac1820
the world > life > the body > nervous system > cerebrospinal axis > [noun]
tree1843
myelencephalon1866
axis1873
neuron1884
neuraxis1889
the world > relative properties > number > graph or diagram > [noun] > diagram > tree diagram
tree1857
subtree1935
tree structure1965
the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > phylum Echinodermata > [noun] > subphylum Eleutherozoa > class Holothurioidea > member of (sea-cucumber) > parts of > branched respiratory organ
tree1870
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > ornamental art and craft > pattern or design > [noun] > others
popinjay1322
serpent1388
moss-work1600
flame1602
frostwork1631
damask branch1634
mascaron1664
lacework1675
swash1680
branch-work1702
escallop-shella1706
festoon work1712
ovum1728
bricking1760
rising sun1787
ram's horn1842
linen-pattern1845
linen-scroll1854
wheel-rood1862
primal1875
patch ornament1878
tree1879
wheel-cross1882
skeuomorph1889
linenfold1891
taotie1915
boteh1917
pelta1935
starburst1953
quilling1972
towel-pattern-
society > occupation and work > equipment > oil and natural gas recovery equipment > [noun] > control centre with branches
tree1954
the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > [noun] > study or science of > diagram representing structure
phrase marker1945
P-marker1955
tree1958
tree-diagram1965
tree structure1965
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Diana's Tree..whereby a Mixture of Silver, Quick-silver and Spirit of Nitre may be Crystallized in shape of a Tree, with little Balls at the end of its Branches representing Fruit.
1843 R. J. Graves Syst. Clin. Med. xxx. 396 A certain portion of the extreme branches of the nervous tree.
1844 G. Fownes Man. Elem. Chem. 199 The common..experiment of the lead tree.
1857 A. Cayley Coll. Math. Papers (1890) III. 242 On the Theory of the analytical Forms called Trees.
1865–8 H. Watts Dict. Chem. III. 478 By the electro-chemical action of zinc in a solution of acetate of lead, it is deposited in an arborescent form, known under the name of Saturn's Tree.
1870 G. Rolleston Forms Animal Life Introd. 145 In the Holothurioidea these coeca take a great development, and are known as the ‘lungs’ or ‘respiratory trees’.
1870 G. Rolleston Forms Animal Life Introd. 149 The left respiratory tree.
1879 Unif. Reg. in Navy List July (1882) 497/1 Tree of trimming braid at top of back.
1881 Amer. Jrnl. Math. 4 266 In a tree of N knots, selecting any knot at pleasure as a root, the tree may be regarded as springing from this root, and it is then called a root-tree.
1930 T. S. Eliot tr. ‘St.-J. Perse’ Anabasis 59 You shall see me for long time unspeaking under the female tree of my veins.
1952 J. W. Clegg in Sellors & Livingstone Mod. Pract. Tuberculosis I. v. 83 Acute tuberculous cavitation results from the liquefaction of a mass of caseous tissue and the expectoration of the debris through the bronchial tree.
1954 Time 11 Jan. 3/2 (advt.) These trees of steel, with their long metal roots extending thousands of feet into the earth, are actually assemblies of valves and fittings which control the flow of oil from reservoirs. Oilmen call them ‘trees’ or ‘Christmas trees’ because of the many unusual patterns and designs obtained when this wellhead equipment is put together to control wells of various kinds, varying pressures, and unique producing characteristics.
1958 W. H. Burge in Information & Control I. 183 The tree used is a hierarchical network with a finite number of points arranged in levels.
1959 Nuovo Cimento Suppl. XIII. 499 The restriction on the number of symbols that can be rewritten in a single rule guarantees that given a terminal string..it will be possible to discover the associated tree or trees.
1972 Computers & Humanities 7 5 With the use of a light gun the linguist can select from alternative expansions in phrase structure trees.
1973 C. W. Gear Introd. Computer Sci. vii. 294 If it is necessary to trace through a tree in order frequently, it is worth storing the trace path.
1976 Canad. Jrnl. Linguistics 21 129 The psychological reality of aspects of deep structure and surface structure trees is open to interpretation in several respects.
1976 Offshore Engineer Mar. 6/3 Shell Expro is going ahead with subsea completion of a stepout well on the Brent field this summer and will be using one of the most sophisticated underwater trees in the world... The tree is described as ‘wet, diverless’, and flowline connection can be carried out from a rig or a drillship.
1977 Lancet 4 June 1187/1 Angiography has made it possible to assess with reasonable confidence the state of the cerebral vascular tree.
1977 Lancet 6 Aug. 278/1 After cholecystectomy for gallstones, it is not unusual for a stone to be left behind in the biliary tree.
1978 Nature 24 Aug. 745/1 The amount of work involved in searching a tree of moves is BD, where B (the branching factor) is the average number of alternatives throughout the tree, and D is the depth of search.
7. attributive or as adj. (in sense 2). Made or formed of ‘tree’, wooden: = treen adj. 1. Obsolete exc. dialect.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > wood > [adjective] > made or constructed of wood
treenc1000
stockya1400
treea1400
timberedc1412
timber?1530
wooden1538
woodya1540
ligneal1599
ligneous1812
carpentered1837
betimbered1847
wooden-built1860
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 21048 Of tree wandis golde he wroȝt.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Fairf. 14) l. 12389 Tree [Vesp. treen, Gött. trein] beddis coude he make.
1402–3 in J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham (1898) I. 217 1 stanetrogh et 1 tretrogh.
1520 Chron. Eng. iv. f. 37/1 In olde tyme the consecracyon..was made in tree vessell.
1587–8 in J. D. Marwick Extracts Rec. Burgh Edinb. (1882) IV. 515 To caus mak ane pair of trey buits.
1599 in G. J. Piccope Lancs. & Cheshire Wills (1861) III. 10 All other tree vessell whatsoever.
1640 R. Baillie Ladensium Αὐτοκατάκρισις v. 77 Their very tree-shoone.
1750 in Cloud of Witnesses (1778) App. 361 A cripple with a tree leg.
1881 S. Evans Evans's Leicestershire Words (new ed.) A ‘tree leg’ is a wooden leg.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive (= ‘of a tree or trees’).
tree-avenue n.
ΚΠ
1904 W. B. Spencer & F. J. Gillen Northern Tribes Central Austral. xvii. 527 A visit to the tree grave.
tree-bark n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > wood > [noun] > bark
rindeOE
barka1300
pillc1300
scorch1480
utter-bark1530
skin1558
shell1561
tree-bark1910
1910 A. C. Haddon Races of Man 74 Men still wear the tree-bark loincloth and the women a tree-bark wrapper.
tree-belt n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > wood or assemblage of trees or shrubs > [noun] > belt or line of trees
suitc1450
neck of the woods1780
droke1822
tree-line1893
fringing forest1903
gallery forest1920
tree-belt1962
1962 E. Snow Other Side of River (1963) lxvi. 502 Another tree belt had been more than half planted over a length of 720 miles.
tree-bole n.
tree-bough n.
tree-crop n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > tree-crop
tree-crop1943
1943 J. S. Huxley TVA 102 An unusual line of TVA research concerns the development of so-called tree-crops.
1958 Times 22 Aug. 12/4 Tree-crops, small fruits, grains, seeds, and livestock are the main farming interests.
tree-foliage n.
tree-foot n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > stem, trunk, or bole > base of
stub1558
butt end1601
tree-foot1855
stump1902
1855 C. Kingsley Heroes (1868) iii. 32 Round the tree-foot was coiled the dragon.
tree-fork n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > fork
grain1513
crotch1573
ala1707
clof1789
axil1791
tree-fork1922
1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. ix. [Scylla & Charybdis] 185 A runaway in blighted treeforks from hue and cry.
1946 D. Thomas Deaths & Entrances 22 A she bird sleeping..Within the nested treefork.
tree-fruit n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > [noun] > fruit by type of growth
orchard fruit1652
tree-fruit1704
tropical fruit1746
bush-fruit1884
cane-fruit1889
1704 J. Pitts True Acct. Mohammetans vii. 66 They have but little Tree-Fruit.
1946 Nature 2 Nov. 605/1 I presented the fundamental and elementary culture of the Mediterranean based on a combination of cereal agriculture and tree-fruit crops.
1970 D. Waterfield Continental Waterboy i. 8 A family could make a living off ten acres by growing tree-fruits.
tree-group n.
tree-growth n.
ΚΠ
1917 Amer. Forestry XXIV. 732 (caption) Comparison of 43 years of rainfall and tree growth.
1956 Nature 21 Jan. 124/1 The variety and abundance of insect life as a whole rapidly fall off beyond the limits of tree-growth.
tree-life n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > [noun] > collectively
arbory1366
timber1792
tree-life1898
1898 Saga-bk. Viking Club Jan. 122 The tree-life of Western Greenland.
tree-lore n.
tree-nursery n.
ΚΠ
1905 A. R. Wallace My Life II. 153 The gardens, the greenhouses, the tree-nursery.
tree pattern n.
ΚΠ
1864 H. Woodward in Intellectual Observer V. 181 Piece of a Vase ornamented with a tree pattern.
tree-root n.
ΚΠ
c1440 Alphabet of Tales 488 He sett hym down at a tre-rute in þe son to comfurth hym.
tree-seed n.
tree-shadow n.
ΚΠ
1954 J. R. R. Tolkien Fellowship of Ring i. iii. 87 As silent as tree shadows.
tree-soul n.
tree-stem n.
ΚΠ
1871 C. Kingsley At Last xi We were aware, between the tree-stems, of a green misty gulf.
tree-stump n.
ΚΠ
1857 T. Moore Handbk. Brit. Ferns (ed. 3) 56 A decaying mossy tree-stump.
tree-trunk n.
ΚΠ
1894 H. Nisbet Bush Girl's Romance 200 There..sat the chief..with his back against a tree-trunk.
1914 Munro Prehist. Britain viii. 185 Only two or three..tree-trunk coffins have been found in Britain.
tree-twig n.
b. Objective.
(a)
tree-enchanter n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the occult > sorcery, witchcraft, or magic > enchantment or casting spells > [noun] > enchanter > specific types of
tree-enchanter1788
reim-kennar1821
shark-charmer1866
1788 W. Cowper Death Mrs. Throckmorton's Bulfinch xi The tree-enchanter Orpheus.
tree-fancier n.
tree-feller n.
ΚΠ
1837 Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 8 Apr. 87/1 Such is the condition and character of the lumberers or tree-fellers.
tree-lopper n.
ΚΠ
1589 A. Fleming tr. Virgil Eclogs i. 3 in A. Fleming tr. Virgil Bucoliks The treelopper..Shall chaunt and sing.
tree-planter n.
ΚΠ
1826 W. Cobbett Rural Rides in Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 28 Oct. 267 Experienced tree-planters.
(b)
tree-boring n.
tree-chopping n.
tree-climbing n.
tree-daubing n.
tree-felling n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > felling trees
fallinga1425
felling1447
fell1531
fall1535
woodfall1588
slaughter1657
logging1706
tree-felling1759
fallage1788
slashing1822
fellage1839
wood-cutting1872
throw1879
bush-falling1882
drive1899
bushwhacking1906
clear-cutting1922
coupe1922
landnam1950
1759 Crit. Rev. Sept. 178 Why, for example, should we be so complaisant to the French, as to use their terms of carcasse,..abbattement.., and coup de main; when we can say fire-ball,..tree-felling,..and bold stroke?
1849 J. Forbes Physician's Holiday i They..indulge in farming, gardening, tree-felling.
tree-growing n.
tree-haunting n.
ΚΠ
1871 C. Darwin Descent of Man (1890) ii. xvi. 489 Tree-haunting birds.
tree-inhabiting n.
tree-lopping n.
tree-loving adj.
ΚΠ
1885 R. Bridges Eros & Psyche vi. xiv. 71 The great hill-haunting and tree-loving Pan.
tree-planting n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > planting trees or afforestation
afforestation1598
inforestation1677
wooding1827
reboisement1872
tree-planting1872
reforestation1876
reforestization1882
reafforestation1884
reforestment1921
1872 in Encycl. Brit. (1902) XXXI. 112/2 Resolved that Wednesday, the 10th day of April 1872, be..set apart..for tree-planting in the state of Nebraska, and the State Board of Agriculture hereby name it Arbor Day.
1902 Encycl. Brit. XXXII. 731/2 In order to encourage tree-planting [in S. Australia], a yearly school holiday devoted to this purpose, and known as Arbor Day, was established in 1886.
a1974 R. Crossman Diaries (1975) I. 67 Today I was busy with Pritchett about tree-planting on the bends of the Cherwell between Upper Prescote and Prescote.
1980 P. Lively Judgement Day vii. 90 He..had refused to contribute to the Tree Planting Fund.
tree-shadowing adj.
ΚΠ
1912 E. Pound Ripostes 37 In streams and tree-shadowing Forests on hill slopes.
tree-smearing n.
c. Instrumental.
tree-arched adj.
ΚΠ
c1857 J. R. Lowell Power of Sound (1896) 21 A parson's son, through tree-arched country ways, I rode.
1936 W. Faulkner Absalom, Absalom! ix. 365 They walked up the rutted tree-arched drive.
tree-bordered adj.
tree-bound adj.
ΚΠ
1886 T. Hardy Mayor of Casterbridge iv, in Graphic 9 Jan. 42/2 From the centre of each side of this tree-bound square ran avenues.
1951 L. MacNeice tr. J. W. von Goethe Faust ii. 202 Through a great plain Peneios freely takes His bush-bound, tree-bound course through quiet lakes.
tree-clad adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [adjective] > wooded
woodland1351
woody1382
well-woodeda1552
well-timbered1567
wooded1605
nemorous1623
arboreous1664
sylvan1667
timbered1701
wood-bound1710
wood-hung1747
forested1796
wooden1816
clumped1819
clumpy1832
tree-clad1836
loggy1851
treey1852
treeful1855
treed1860
groved1876
woodlanded1945
1836–48 B. D. Walsh tr. Aristophanes Clouds i. iv Fly to the tops of the tree-clad mountains!
tree-covered adj.
tree-crowned adj.
tree-dotted adj.
tree-embowered adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > condition of being external > enclosing or enclosure > [adjective] > enclosed > in or as in other specific enclosure or receptacle
chamberedc1540
housed1569
bagged1572
celled1586
arboured1606
closeteda1649
vesselled1660
cabineted1680
encysted1705
caverned1734
mounded1807
castled1821
casketed1822
styed1829
tree-embowered1866
tunnelled1901
1866 C. Kingsley Hereward the Wake II. xi. 188 Swaffham, Quy, and Waterbeach, and the rest of the tree-embowered hamlets which fringed the fen.
tree-fringed adj.
tree-garnished adj.
ΚΠ
1601 J. Weever Mirror of Martyrs sig. Evij Tree-garnisht Cambriaes loftie mountaines.
tree-girt adj.
ΚΠ
1812 W. Tennant Anster Fair ii. xxxiii. 38 All the tree-girt country-seats.
tree-grown adj.
ΚΠ
1846 J. G. Whittier Poems (1849) 321 Ghosts of old Beliefs still flit and moan..O'er tree-grown barrow and gray ring of stone.
1978 Detroit Free Press 5 Mar. (Parade Suppl.) 15/3 Tree-grown cherries..demand years of tender care.
tree-hung adj.
ΚΠ
1927 J. Elder Thomasina Toddy xii. 118 Leafy backwaters, sunny fields, and tree-hung banks to suit all tastes.
1981 Sunday Express 11 Oct. (Colour Suppl.) 23/2 There is a little, tree-hung, irregular village square with an island of greenery at its hub.
tree-lined adj.
ΚΠ
1910 Bradshaw's Railway Guide Apr. 1123 (advt.) The smartest bijou hotel in London... Situate in wide tree-lined thoroughfare.
1978 R. Ludlum Holcroft Covenant xi. 130 He..drove rapidly through the peaceful, tree-lined suburban area.
tree-locked adj.
ΚΠ
1844 E. B. Browning Lost Bower iii A little wood..As it climbeth..Sideway from the tree-locked valley.
tree-planted adj.
ΚΠ
1879 C. M. Yonge Magnum Bonum III. xl. 904 The broad tree-planted streets of the old Quaker city.
1962 E. Snow Other Side of River (1963) lxx. 539 Strolling down a tree-planted street of new apartment houses I chose one to enter.
tree-scattered adj.
ΚΠ
1951 S. Spender World within World ii. 39 I used to go for long walks and bicycle rides into the hilly, tree-scattered, river-winding countryside.
tree-screened adj.
ΚΠ
1923 R. Kipling Irish Guards in Great War II. 163 A close and blind land of woods, copses, farms, mills and tree-screened roads.
tree-set adj.
ΚΠ
1870 W. Morris Earthly Paradise: Pt. IV 385 Like to a tree-set garden.
tree-shaded adj.
ΚΠ
1909 Westm. Gaz. 20 Oct. 4/1 Matthew Arnold's tree-shaded grave lies to the south-east of the church.
1958 O. Caroe Pathans xvii. 285 A place he loved, covered with green turf, tree-shaded beside the broad stream.
tree-shadowed adj.
ΚΠ
1952 S. Spender Learning Laughter ix. 117 Ben Shemen is a charming, tree-shadowed place.
tree-skirted adj.
ΚΠ
1854 H. Miller Schools & Schoolmasters (1858) xxiii. 499 A tree-skirted glade.
tree-surrounded adj.
ΚΠ
1915 W. B. Yeats Reveries ii. 16 Next to Merville where I lived, was another tree-surrounded house.
tree-tangled adj.
ΚΠ
1925 A. Huxley Those Barren Leaves ii. v. 125 Round as a fruit, tree-tangled, shines The moon.
tree-wrapt adj.
ΚΠ
1886 W. B. Yeats Mosada 3 Whose dwelling was a tree-wrapt island.
d. Locative.
(a)
tree-dweller n.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabitant > inhabitant by type of accommodation > [noun] > tree-dweller
tree-dweller1894
tree-man1904
1894 Pop. Sci. Monthly June 69 Such is the name of the tree-dweller.
(b)
tree-dwelling adj.
ΚΠ
1908 H. H. Johnston G. Grenfell & Congo II. xxi. 507 These tree-dwelling Pygmies.
tree-feeding adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > by eating habits > [adjective] > herbivorous > feeding off trees
tree-feeding1853
1853 Zoologist 11 4035 Instances of tree-feeding species.
tree-living adj.
e. Similative, etc.
tree-great adj.
ΚΠ
1600 E. Fairfax tr. T. Tasso Godfrey of Bulloigne xi. xxxvii. 202 With dreadfull hornes of iron tought tree-great.
tree-like adj.
ΚΠ
1630 tr. G. Botero Relations Famous Kingdomes World (rev. ed.) 7 The hollow truncks of most tree-like canes being full of water.
1776 W. Withering Brit. Plants (1796) II. 316 Stem tree-like.
C2. Special combinations.
a. In names of plants, usually denoting species or varieties that grow to the stature or in the form of a tree, sometimes those that grow on trees. See also tree-celandine n. at celandine n. 3, tree violet n. at violet n.1 Compounds 1a, tree willow n. at willow n. Compounds 1, tree wormwood n. at wormwood n. 1b.
(a)
tree amaranthus n.
ΚΠ
1786 J. Abercrombie Gardeners Daily Assistant 115 India pink, mignonette,..tree-amaranthus.
tree cabbage n.
ΚΠ
1829 S. Glover Hist. County of Derby I. 199 The ten-thousand-headed cabbage, or tree cabbage.
tree carnation n.
tree crane's-bill n.
ΚΠ
1712 J. Petiver in Philos. Trans. 1710–12 (Royal Soc.) 27 420 Hermans round-leaved Cape Tree Cranes-bill.
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Categories »
tree fuchsia n.
tree melon n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > of tropical America > mamee-tree
mammee1587
mammee tree1672
tree melon1905
1905 Daily Graphic 16 Jan. 4/4 The mummy-apple, a delicate tree-melon.
tree nightshade n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Solanaceae (nightshade and allies) > [noun]
morela1400
nightshadea1400
petty morel?a1425
hound's-berryc1485
micklewort1531
manicon1543
garden nightshade1576
dulcamara1578
mad nightshade1578
raging nightshade1578
sleeping nightshade1578
solanum1578
tree nightshade1597
black nightshade1607
moonshade1626
mumme tree1629
winter cherry1629
blue bindweeda1637
canker berry1651
shrub-nightshade1666
poison berry1672
nightshade1733
woody nightshade1796
Sodom apple1808
African nightshade1839
solanal1846
felon-wood1861
shoo-fly plant1949
1597 J. Gerard Herball ii. 289 This rare and pleasaunt plant [sc. Solanum arborescens], called tree Nightshade, is taken of some to be a kinde of Ginnie pepper, but not rightly.
tree pea n.
ΚΠ
1884 Leisure Hour Feb. 84/1 The tree-pea, a shrub bearing pods very similar to those familiar to us all.
tree primrose n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > evening primrose and allied flowers
tree primrose1629
primrose tree1728
Onagra1735
oenothera1754
night primrose1759
evening primrose1761
night willow-herb1770
nightly primrose1785
sundrop1785
godetia1836
1629 J. Parkinson Paradisi in Sole 264 The tree Primrose of Virginia.
1785 T. Martyn tr. J.-J. Rousseau Lett. Elements Bot. xix. 263 Tree Primrose, a Virginian plant... The corol is of a fine yellow, shut during the day, but expanding in the evening; whence some call it Nightly Primrose.
tree rhododendron n.
ΚΠ
1848 tr. W. Hoffmeister Trav. Ceylon & Continental India iv. 181 A forest of magnificent Tree-Rhododendrons.
(b) See also tree-creeper n. 2, tree-fern n., tree-moss n., tree-trefoil n.
tree aloe n. Aloë dichotoma.
tree azalea n. Azalea (Rhododendron) arborescens.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > cultivated or ornamental trees and shrubs > [noun] > azaleas or rhododendrons
mountain rose1640
rhododendron1657
Alpine rose1728
winterbloom1752
azalea1753
mountain rosebay1759
rosebay1760
rhodora1770
mountain laurel1785
swamp azalea1796
big laurel1810
rose tree1818
white honeysuckle1818
meadow pink1827
Pinkster1833
mayflower1838
alpenrose1839
swamp pink1840
rhodie1851
swamp honeysuckle1856
ponticum1875
tree azalea1884
rhodo1886
Kurume azalea1920
1884 W. Miller Dict. Eng. Names Plants Azalea arborescens, Smooth Azalea, Tree Azalea.
tree-beard n. (a) Tillandsia usneoides; (b) the lichen Usnea barbata.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > moss > [noun] > Spanish moss
long moss1697
black moss1709
old man's beard1756
Tillandsia1759
Spanish beard1763
Spanish moss1823
longbeard1832
death moss1838
tree-beard1861
Spaniard's beard1880
Florida moss1888
1861 R. Bentley Man. Bot. ii. iii. 675 Tillandsia usneoides is commonly called Tree-beard or Old Man's Beard, from the..mass of dark coloured fibres, which hang from the trees in South America.
tree-box n. any of several larger varieties of the common box, Buxus sempervirens.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > box-tree or shrub > [noun]
box treeOE
boxOE
busshe1430
dwarf box1578
ground-box1578
bush-tree1595
boxwood1652
tree-box1731
1731 P. Miller Gardeners Dict. I. s.v. Buxus. All the Varieties of the Tree or large Box are proper to intermix in Clumps of Ever-greens.
1785 G. Washington Jrnl. 13 Apr. (1925) II. 360 12 Horse Chestnut Trees..and an equal number of cuttings of the Tree Box.
1858 J. A. Warder Hedges & Evergreens ii. 240 Where a moderate or low hedge is needed,..nothing can be better than the Tree-box.
tree cactus n. a tall-growing cactus, as the saguaro.
tree-climber n. = liana n.; cf. tree-creeper n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular tree or plant yielding useful gum or resin > rubber trees or plants > [noun] > landolphia plants
tree-climber1864
landolphia1887
tree-creeper1887
1864 J. A. Grant Walk across Afr. 339 A tree-climber (Landolphia florida?) lay with its trunk winding like a huge snake.
tree clover n. Melilotus alba.
tree cotton n. Gossypium arboreum.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > yielding fibre, thatching, or basket material > [noun] > cotton-plant > types of
lump cotton1640
cotton shrub1752
kidney-cotton1789
nankeen cotton1797
sea-island1803
shrub cotton1858
tree cotton1884
Pima1914
1884 de Candolle's Orig. Cultiv. Plants 406 Upper Egypt,..where we know the tree-cotton to be wild.
tree cranberry n. = cranberry tree n. at cranberry n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tree or plant producing edible berries > cranberry bush
crone1597
bearberry1651
moor-berry1670
cranberry1672
marshwort1863
tree cranberry1868
1868 B. J. Lossing Hudson (new ed.) 35 Here and there among the rocks..the tree-cranberry appeared.
tree-daisy n. = Olearia n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > Australasian trees > [noun] > evergreens
pine1788
angophora1804
ohia1815
pate1832
pohutukawa1832
Moreton Bay chestnut1836
Olearia1839
horopito1847
ramarama1848
matipo1853
white pine1856
musk tree1866
manoao1867
patete1867
puka1867
rangiora1867
tawhiri1872
tarata1876
lemon-wood1879
Otago ivy-tree1883
horizontal1888
lehua1888
inanga1889
mountain pine1889
puka1889
Queensland kauri1889
sheep-bush1889
wilga1889
mutton-bird tree1891
tree-daisy1926
1926 J. C. Andersen in Trans. & Proc. N.Z. Inst. 56 702/2 Olearia: daisy tree, daisy-tree, tree-daisy.
1958 L. Cockayne & E. P. Turner Trees N.Z. (ed. 4) 142 Weeping tree daisy..common in Central Otago.
tree-fuchsia n. a shrub or small tree, Fuchsia excorticata, native to New Zealand and bearing pendent reddish-purple flowers with blue pollen; cf. konini n.
ΚΠ
1906 R. M. Laing & E. W. Blackwell Plants N.Z. 294 (heading) Fuchsia excorticata (the tree fuchsia).
1910 L. Cockayne N.Z. Plants iii. 29 The tree-fuchsia..offers a transition to the scrambling habit.
1970 S. Afr. Panorama Feb. 35/3 Below the platform a minute sunbird with iridescent blue plumage hovered before the crimson blooms of a tree-fuchsia.
tree germander n. Teucrium fruticans (Miller Plant-n.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > labiate plant or plants > [noun] > germander plants
hindheala1300
ambrosea1350
wild sagea1400
germander?a1425
tetterwosea1500
English treacle1548
garlic-germander1548
scordium1548
wood-sage1571
garlic-sage1597
horse-chire1597
tree germander1597
mountain sage1659
marum1666
teucrium1673
mastic plant1718
thorny germander1822
bitter sage1865
1597 J. Gerard Herball ii. 532 Of Tree Germander.
tree golden-rod n. = goldenrod n. and adj. tree.
tree-hair n. see quots.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > lichen > [noun] > other lichens
cup-moss1597
ground liverwort1597
Usnea1597
perelle1712
oak moss1728
necklace moss1759
rag1759
thrush-lichen1759
Iceland lichen1777
Iceland moss1785
map lichen1796
scripture-wort1835
letter lichen1846
dog lichen1853
fairy cups1855
velvet moss1858
manna lichen1864
tree-hair1866
famine-bread1887
old man's beard1888
sea ivory1966
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. II. 1161 Tree-hair, a name sometimes given to the dark wiry pendulous entangled masses of a lichen, Cornicularia jubata,..not uncommon on trees in sub-alpine woods.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. II. 1197 The species [of Usnea]..are often called Tree Moss or Tree Hair.
tree heath n. Erica arborea.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular timber trees or shrubs > [noun] > white heath tree or root
tree heath1777
brier1868
brier-root1869
1777 Hunter in Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 68 40 The erica arborea or Tree-heath, a native of Spain and Portugal.
1907 Gentleman's Mag. July 98/2 The big tree-heaths begin about 9500 ft.
tree houseleek n. a succulent plant, Aeonium arboreum (family Crassulaceae), with a basal rosette of leaves and clusters of yellow flowers.
ΚΠ
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Ioubarbe arborée, Tree Housleeke..Ioubarbe marine, Sea Housleek, Sea Aygreen, hearb Aloes.
1756 J. Hill Brit. Herbal 41/1 This is not impropely distinguished by the name of tree houseleek.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. I. 23/2 Æonium arboreum is well known to gardeners as the tree houseleek; its loose panicles, with a profusion of clammy yellow blossoms, are very elegant.
2002 Gardening Containers (Taunton Press) 153 Aeonium arboreum ‘Schwarzkopf’ (black tree houseleek).
tree lily n. (a) a plant of the genus Vellozia (N.O. Amaryllidaceæ), comprising arborescent species found in Brazil and South Africa, with lily-like flowers; (b) a name for the genus Dracæna (N.O. Liliaceæ).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > other non-British trees or shrubs > [noun]
andrachne1601
genip1666
allspice1686
allspice tree1691
Morinda1754
garcinia1760
pea tree1766
canarium1776
Pemphis1777
oak tree1789
buddleia1791
ixora1816
Canary wood1820
persea1823
naio1826
plume nutmeg1846
partridge pea1852
Leichhardt-tree1860
hardwood1864
scrubwood1874
tree lily1891
pagoda tree1940
schefflera1954
1891 Cent. Dict. at Vellozia Tree-lily.
tree lotus n. the nettle-tree, Celtis australis; = lote-tree n. 1.
tree lucerne n. (see quot. 1965).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > broom and allies > [noun]
broomc1000
genistaa1398
junipera1425
broom-treea1450
cytisus1548
French broom1548
besom-weed1578
green broom?1578
scorpion-thorn1760
retama1764
retem1777
broom-wood1810
scorpion1840
scorpion plant1866
ginestra1884
scorpion-broom1884
tree lucerne1933
1933 Bulletin (Sydney) 14 June 25/1 Tree lucerne is very hardy and easily grown from seed.
1965 Austral. Encycl. V. 383/1 The white-flowered tagasaste of Teneriffe (Cytisus proliferus), which is a very large broom, is often known in Australia as tree lucerne, a name strictly applicable to the yellow-flowered bush Medicago arborea.
1981 Southern Hort. (N.Z.) Spring 53/1 Weather conditions could influence the situation, as too could the presence of tree lucerne near-by.
tree lungwort n. (a) a lichen, Sticta pulmonaria, = lungwort n. 5; (b) a boraginaceous plant, Mertensia virginica (cf. lungwort n. 3b).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > lichen > [noun] > lungwort or lungs of oak
hazel rag1565
lungwort1578
lightwort1587
tree lungwort1597
wood liverwort1597
oak-lungs1727
hazel crottles1772
hazelraw1777
lungs of oak1856
1597 J. Gerard Herball iii. 1377 Lichen arborum. Tree Lungwoort.
tree lupine n. Lupinus arboreus of California.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > particular flower or plant esteemed for flower > [noun] > pea flowers > lupins
electreOE
lupinec1420
flat-bean1597
fig-bean1657
tree lupine1882
blue bonnet1901
Russell1937
1882 Garden 3 June 381/1 The Tree Lupine..bears a profusion of yellow flowers.
tree mallow n. any of several large woody-stemmed plants of the genus Lavatera, allied to the mallows; esp. L. arborea, of sea cliffs and maritime rocks in western Europe.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > hibiscus or mallow trees or shrubs and allies > [noun] > tree mallow
tree mallow1597
velvet-leaf1728
mallow tree1736
1597 J. Gerard Herball ii. 788 Althæa arborescens. Tree Mallowe.
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Maulve grande, the great Mallow, or tree Mallow.
1754 Catal. Seeds in Fam. Rose of Kilravock (Spalding Club) 427 Tree-mallow, a shrub.
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. II. 665/1 L[avatera] arborea, the Sea or Tree Mallow, is a common south-west European plant.
tree medick n. a shrubby yellow-flowered medick of southern Europe, Medicago arborea, sometimes grown elsewhere for ornament.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular medicinal plants or parts > medicinal trees or shrubs > [noun] > tree-trefoil
tree-trefoil1552
pretiefollie1591
milk trefoil1597
shrub trefoil1597
tetrifolie1601
moon trefoil1659
tree medick1884
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medical preparations of specific origin > medicine composed of a plant > [noun] > plant used in medicine > specific plant > tree-trefoil
tree-trefoil1552
shrub trefoil1597
tree medick1884
1884 W. Miller Dict. Eng. Names Plants Medicago arborea, Moon-Trefoil, Tree-Medick.
tree-mignonette n. mignonette (Resada odorata) trained to grow with a bushy head.
ΚΠ
1817 Bot. Reg. 3 227 Resada odorata. β. suffrutescens. Tree-Mignonette.
tree nettle n. = nettle-tree n. 2.
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Categories »
tree onion n. see onion n.1 2.
tree orchid n. (also tree orchis) an orchid growing on trees, as those of the genus Epidendrum.
tree peony n. (also tree pæony) = moutan n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular cultivated or ornamental plants > cultivated or ornamental trees and shrubs > [noun] > other ornamental trees or shrubs
ambrosieOE
minced pie1739
Christmas bush1750
black-gum1785
Nandina1787
allamanda1789
restio1796
moutan1808
tree peony1811
snowberry1815
aucuba1819
zamang1819
Deutzia1837
ground-jasmine1848
nandin1866
heavenly bamboo1871
spathodea1873
Escallonia1882
nanten1884
o-matsu1916
Japanese pagoda tree1924
dove tree1933
1811 W. T. Aiton Hortus Kewensis (ed. 2) III. 315 Chinese Tree Pæony. Moutan. Nat[ive] of China.
1842 J. Aiton Domest. Econ. (1857) 287 The laburnums,..the dwarf almond on the verge of the walks, and the tree-peony.
1880 Encycl. Brit. XII. 258/1 The Moutans or Tree Pæonies are remarkable for their sub-shrubby habit, forming vigorous plants sometimes attaining a height of 6 to 8 feet.
1962 I. Murdoch Unofficial Rose i. 44 The more intense evening light against a long bed of yuccas and tree peonies.
1980 R. Grounds Private Life Plants xxiii. 133 As many as 3,000 flowers have been counted on a tree peony.
tree poke n. Phytolacca dioica.
tree poppy n. a Californian poppy, Dendromecon rigidum, with yellow flowers, remarkable for its shrubby growth.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > shrubs > non-British shrubs > [noun] > American or West Indian
ramgoat bush1566
burton-wood1697
cowage cherry1725
Jack-in-the-busha1726
screw tree1739
lady of the night1752
goatweed1756
solandra1797
silk-tassel1833
garrya1835
matico1839
choisya1840
Romneya1845
jointer1847
creosote-bush1851
creosote-plant1854
bridal wreath1856
ocotillo1856
adelaster1863
sage rose1864
white horse1864
tree poppy1866
Tacsonia1869
rain tree1877
piquillin bush1884
tassel-bush1891
bush poppy1899
Mexican orange1923
shrimp plant1941
1866 J. Lindley & T. Moore Treasury Bot. I. 392 Dendromecon, literally Tree Poppy, is a most appropriate name, the plant having all the aspect and character of the poppy tribe, combined with a woody stem and branches.
tree purslane n. = purslane tree n. at purslane n. Compounds 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > African trees or shrubs > [noun] > other African trees or shrubs
keurboom1731
silver-tree1731
witteboom1799
Hottentot's bean1801
melkhouta1823
monkey apple1824
witgatboom1824
Hottentot's bean tree1833
spek-boom1834
mopane1854
Welwitschia1862
ambatch1863
miombo1864
pith tree1864
porkwood1875
tree purslane1882
buffalo-horn1887
monkey guava1887
bush willow1917
melkboom1917
msasa1923
rooibos1932
miraa1945
ovangkol1972
pigeon wood1972
tambotie1973
1882 Garden 22 July 73/3 The tree Purslane..is a loose, rambling plant.
tree tomato n. a small tree native to the northern Andes and now naturalized in many subtropical countries, Solanum betaceum (family Solanaceae); (also) its glossy, egg-shaped fruit, occurring in red, orange, yellow, and purple varieties; also called tamarillo.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > vegetables > fruits as vegetables > [noun] > tomato > tree tomato
tree tomato1836
tamarillo1966
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > fruits as vegetables > tomato > tree tomato
tree tomato1836
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular vegetables > [noun] > fruits as vegetables > tomato > tree tomato > tree tomato plant
tree tomato1836
tamarillo1966
1836 Atlas 10 Apr. 2/3 Wheat from Dr. Hamilton, of Plymouth, the tree tomato, turnips, cucumbers, onions, the agave Americana, and the Pandanus Odoratissimus, were the prize productions.
1884 Gardeners' Chron. 21 510 Tree Tomato. This is the popular name of a fruit naturalized in Jamaica... It answers in every respect the purposes for which the ordinary Tomato is esteemed.
1944 Living off Land: Man. Bushcraft ii. 40 Tree-tomatoes will be found as garden-escapees.
1959 N.Z. Listener 8 May 22/3 Tree Tomato Sauce. Eight pounds tree tomatoes, 2 large onions, [etc.].
1976 K. Thackeray Crownbird v. 91 A separate table bore..tree tomatoes, portions of yellow jackfruit and chilled mountain paw-paw.
2012 Taranaki (N.Z.) Daily News (Nexis) 30 June (News Suppl. section) 2 A tree tomato crop is looking as healthy just behind the house.
tree sorrel n. Rumex Lunaria.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > Polygonaceae (dock and allies) > [noun] > dock and allies > sorrel
sour dockc1325
sorrelc1440
sourock?a1505
sheep's sorrel1578
Tours sorrel1578
green sauce1620
moonwort1697
ranty-tantya1700
tree sorrel1753
sheep-sorrel1806
sour grass1866
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. at Sorrel The roundish-leaved tree-sorrel.
tree-tobacco n. see quot. 1895.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants perceived as weeds or harmful plants > weed > [noun] > other weeds
zizanya1400
hog's fennel1525
zizania1526
eyebright1578
henbit1578
red eye-bright1657
common orache1728
sitfast1762
winter weed1787
dubbeltjie1795
red bartsia1805
tread-softly1814
rattlesnake leaf1822
popple1855
horse-nettle1860
Cape weed1878
tree-tobacco1895
king devil1898
khaki weed1907
white top1909
three-corner jack1919
1895 Daily News 28 Aug. 5/4 A very undesirable weed from the Argentine is spreading in the Canary Islands. This is the Tree-tobacco... It is a troublesome pest in New South Wales and Victoria, where it is regarded as poisonous to cattle and horses.
b. In names of animals living in or on or frequenting trees. See also tree kangaroo n. at kangaroo n. 2, tree-pipit see pipit n., tree-shrike see shrike n.2, tree squirrel n. at Compounds 2b(b), tree swallow n. at swallow n.1 Compounds 1, tree-swift see swift n.2 2a, tree-wasp see wasp n.1 1.
(a)
tree-ant n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Hymenoptera > [noun] > suborder Apocrita, Petiolata, or Heterophaga > group Aculeata (stinging) > ant > that live in or frequent trees
carpenter1883
tree-ant1899
1899 F. V. Kirby Sport E. Central Afr. xv. 163 A colony of those terrible insects, the red tree-ants.
tree-bee n.
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1693 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 17 612 He admires the..Contrivance of the Honeycomb, and particularly the Tree-Bee.
tree-beetle n.
ΚΠ
1748 H. Baker in Philos. Trans. 1747 (Royal Soc.) 44 578 The Tree-Beetle, or blind Beetle, vulgarly in Norfolk called the Dor.
tree-boa n.
tree-chafer n.
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?1703 J. Petiver Gazophylacii II. 29 The great Brown-Tree-Chaffer.
1816 W. Kirby & W. Spence Introd. Entomol. (1818) II. xxiii. 321 The less savage but equally destructive tree-chafers (Melolonthæ).
tree-cuckoo n. (see tree cuckoo at cuckoo n. 1b).
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1872 E. Coues Key to N. Amer. Birds 45 The crural feathers are..sometimes long and flowing, as in..our tree-cuckoos.
tree-falcon n.
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1668 W. Charleton Onomasticon Zoicon 66 Falco Arborarius,..the tree-Falcon.
tree-leech n.
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1900 F. T. Pollok & W. S. Thom Wild Sports Burma & Assam ii. 40 The tree-leeches, so plentiful in forests..in Lower Burma, are a sad drawback to the pleasures of sport.
tree-linnet n. (Scottishtree-lintie)
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1844 Zoologist 2 508 Chaffinch, ‘Tree-lintie’.
tree-monkey n.
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the world > animals > mammals > order Primates > suborder Anthropoidea (higher primates) > [noun] > monkey > arboreal
tree-monkey1893
1893 Outing 22 109/2 Swarms of tree-monkeys congregate in chattering throngs.
tree-partridge n.
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the world > animals > birds > order Galliformes (fowls) > family Phasianidae (pheasants, etc.) > [noun] > miscellaneous members
gold pheasant1765
white-eared1780
cheer1826
tragopan1829
koklass1864
tree-partridge1864
wood-quail1891
bush-quail1893
swamp quail1895
1864 J. A. Grant Walk across Afr. 93 The..tree-partridge resembles the painted one of India, has yellow legs, beautiful plumage, and weighs about a pound.
1895 W. R. O. Grant in R. Lydekker Royal Nat. Hist. IV. 413 The common tree-partridge (A[rboricola] torqueolus) ranging to an elevation of fourteen thousand feet.
tree-slug n.
(b) See also tree-creeper n. 1, tree-frog n., tree-goose n., tree sparrow n., tree-toad n., tree-worm n.
tree-asp n. a venomous serpent of the genus Dendraspis.
tree-bear n. U.S. local a name for the racoon.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Procyonidae (raccoons) > [noun] > genus Procyon (raccoon)
raccoon1610
rattoon1648
coon1742
Procyon1827
tree-bear1891
wash-bear1891
washer1891
washing racoon1891
1891 Cent. Dict. Tree-bear.
1902 Westm. Gaz. 31 May 2/1 Joe produced from the recesses of his loose blouse a baby tree-bear and a handful of gum leaves.
tree-bug n. any one of various hemipterous insects which feed upon the juices of trees and shrubs.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > unspecified types > that feeds on plants
plant bug1763
plant louse1763
tree-bug1842
1842 J. C. Loudon Suburban Horticulturist 108 Besides the above-mentioned Ichneumonidæ, ants, field or tree bugs, and many sorts of spiders, contribute..to the extirpation of various insects.
tree-butterfly n. a butterfly that lives among trees, as those of the South African genus Charaxes.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > Rhopalocera (butterflies) > [noun] > family Nymphalidae > subfamily Ithomiinae > genus Charaxes > member of
tree-butterfly1869
1869 R. Trimen in R. Noble Cape & its People 99 One of these tree-butterflies, massive of thorax and broad and rigid of wing.
tree-cat n. (a) a viverrine animal of the genus Paradoxurus, a palm-cat; (b) = tree-fox n.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Carnivora > family Viverridae > [noun] > genus Paradoxurus (palm-civet)
musang1783
palm marten1827
paradoxure1840
palm-cat1849
palm civet1862
toddy cat1867
tree-cat1885
paradoxurine1890
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Mustelidae (weasel, marten, otter, or badger) > [noun] > genus Martes (marten) > martes pennanti (fisher)
pekan1760
fisher weasel1771
peskan1773
fisher1796
tree-cat1885
tree-fox1904
1885 W. T. Hornaday Two Years in Jungle vii. 70 It proved to be a tree-cat (Paradoxurus musanga).
1894 R. Lydekker Royal Nat. Hist. I. 457 The palm-civets, tree-cats, or toddy-cats, as they are indifferently called.
Thesaurus »
Categories »
tree-crab n. a species of land-crab, Birgus latro, also called palm-crab (see palm n.1 Compounds 1).
tree-cricket n. a cricket of the genus Œcanthus.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Orthoptera > family Gryllidae > member of (cricket) > member of genus Cecanthus
tree-cricket1859
1859 New Amer. Cycl. VI. 63/1 They form the genus œcanthus, and are called tree or climbing crickets.
tree-crow n. (a) any one of various Asian birds intermediate between crows and jays, as the genera Crypsirhina, Dendrocitta, etc.; (b) wattled tree-crow, a crow of the sub-family Glaucopinæ, a wattle-crow.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > larger song birds > family Corvidae (crow) > [noun] > other types of
tree-crow1879
urraca1882
scrub jay1938
1879 E. P. Wright Animal Life 246 Of the Tree Crows we can only mention—The Benteot (Crypsirhina varia) of Java.
tree-dove n. any one of numerous arboreal species of pigeon of India, Australia, etc., belonging or allied to the genus Macropygia.
tree-duck n. a duck of the genus Dendrocygna or an allied genus.
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the world > animals > birds > freshwater birds > order Anseriformes (geese, etc.) > subfamily Merginae (duck) > [noun] > unspecified and miscellaneous types of
Roan duck1763
wood-duck1777
Rouen1785
lady1792
stranger1792
Rouen duck1795
tree-duck1824
Labrador duck1834
hareld1841
whio1847
pink-eyed duck1848
penguin duck1850
topknot duck1850
Aylesbury1854
roan1854
pink-eye1861
Peking duck1874
runner1878
bluebill1884
Steller's (eider) (duck)1884
Peking1885
half-bird1893
torrent-duck1899
1824 J. F. Stephens Shaw's Gen. Zool. XII. ii. 98 Tree Duck..inhabits the West India islands and the adjacent continent... It is said to make a whistling..noise, and to build its nest in trees.
tree-finch n. = tree sparrow n. a.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > seed eaters > family Ploceidae > [noun] > subfamily Ploceinae (weaver) > genus Passer > passer montanus (tree sparrow)
mountain sparrow1668
tree sparrow1770
tree-finch1783
1783 J. Latham Gen. Synopsis Birds II. 252 Tree Finch..is observed always to build on trees, and not in buildings like the House Sparrow.
tree-fish n. see quot.
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the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > order Scorpaeniformes (scorpion-fish) > [noun] > family Scorpaenidae (scorpion-fishes) > sebastes or sebastichthys
rockfish1605
yellowtaila1622
Jacob Evertsen1727
tambour1854
rasher1881
tomcod1881
corsair1884
tree-fish1888
1888 G. B. Goode Amer. Fishes 263 Sebastichthys serriceps,..known as the ‘Tree-fish’, an appellation originating with the Portuguese..and without obvious application.
tree-fly n. a fly of the family Xylophagidæ.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Brachycera > member of family Xylophagidae
tree-fly1834
xylophagan1842
xylophage1877
1834 Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 3 357/3 Much wood..during warm and summer months, raining down great store of tree-flies.
tree-fox n. see quot.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > family Mustelidae (weasel, marten, otter, or badger) > [noun] > genus Martes (marten) > martes pennanti (fisher)
pekan1760
fisher weasel1771
peskan1773
fisher1796
tree-cat1885
tree-fox1904
1904 P. Fountain Great North-West x. 104 The tree-fox, or tree-cat, of the trappers..is Mustela pennanti, often called the fish-marten.
tree-hoopoe n. a bird of the genus Irrisor, a wood-hoopoe.
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the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Coraciiformes (kingfisher, etc.) > [noun] > family Phoeniculidae (wood hoopoe)
tree-hoopoe1873
wood hoopoe1908
1873 Cassell's Bk. Birds III. 15 The Tree Hoopoes (Irrisor) inhabit the forests of Africa... [They] pass their lives exclusively upon trees.
tree-hopper n. any one of various homopterous insects which live on trees; sometimes spec. the cicada.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > member of
tree-hopper1836
homopteran1842
homopter1864
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Cicadidae
cicada?a1475
cigala1484
bow-krickel1658
locust1709
harvest-fly1753
spit-insect1755
tettix1775
balm-cricket1783
cicala1821
tree-hopper1836
cicad1855
knife-grinder1859
scissors-grinder1875
jar-fly1880
squeaker1887
New Forest cicada1978
1836–9 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. II. 868/2 The..tree-hoppers..approach to the Terebrantia.
1850 P. H. Gosse Sacred Streams vii. 250 Probably tree-hoppers, Cicadæ, are meant.
tree-jhow n. tree-like shrubby tamarisk.
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1920 Blackwood's Mag. Jan. 110/1 A patch of tree-jhow.
Thesaurus »
Categories »
tree-lark n. = tree-pipit.
tree lemur n. = bush-baby n. at bush n.1 Compounds 2.
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1928 Daily Express 31 July 4 A tree-lemur or ‘bush-baby’.
tree-lizard n. a lizard of the group Dendrosaura.
tree-lobster n. = tree-crab n.
tree-louse n. an aphis, a plant-louse.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > subclass Pterygota > [noun] > division Exopterygota or Hemimetabola > order Hemiptera > suborder Homoptera > family Aphis
cantharidesa1398
blackfly1652
greenflya1680
green louse1682
green bug1704
collier1742
puceron1744
plant louse1763
aphis1771
leaf louse1774
smother-fly1785
tree-louse1797
ant cow1875
aphid1884
stilt-bug1895
1797 Monthly Mag. 3 454/2 Bonnet..applied himself..to collecting..his experiments and observations concerning the tree-louse and the worm.
Categories »
tree-martin n. (a) an Australian bird, Petrochelidon nigricans (Morris Austral Eng.); (b) a South American bird, Progne tapera.
tree-mouse n. (a) any species of mouse of arboreal habits; (b) see quot. 1897.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > [noun] > family Sittidae > genus Sitta > sitta carolinensis (white breasted nuthatch)
white-breasted nuthatch1808
tree-mouse1897
the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Rodentia or rodent > superfamily Myomorpha (mouse, rat, vole, or hamster) > [noun] > family Muridae > genus Mus or mouse > of particular form, habits, or habitat
country mouse1553
tree-mouse1897
nude1966
1897 ‘N. Blanchan’ Bird Neighbors 84 White-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis)... Called also Tree-mouse.
1904 Q. Rev. Oct. 472 The tree-mice and the veldt-rats.
tree-oyster n. an oyster found upon the roots of the mangrove.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Triploblastica or Coelomata > class Pelecypoda or Conchifera > [noun] > section Asiphonida > family Ostreidae > member of (oyster) > that grows in particular place or way
rock oyster1634
tree-oyster1768
bunch-oyster1881
1768 J. Ellis in Philos. Trans. 1767 (Royal Soc.) 57 432 The Tree Oyster, and the Slipper Barnicle.
1901 Daily Chron. 28 Sept. 5/2 Proposal for increasing and improving the cultivation of tree-oysters.
Categories »
tree-pie n. a tree-crow of the genus Dendrocitta, found in India, China, and neighbouring countries.
tree-pigeon n. any one of various arboreal pigeons inhabiting Asia, Africa, and Australia.
tree-porcupine n. any porcupine of the subfamily Sphingurinæ, inhabiting America and the West Indies, living in trees, and having prehensile tails.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Rodentia or rodent > superfamily Hystricomorpha (porcupine or guinea-pig) > [noun] > faimily Erethizontidae > genus Coendu (tree porcupine)
tree-porcupine1871
1871 C. Kingsley At Last v The Tree Porcupine, or Coendou,..climbs trees after leaves, and swings about like the monkeys.
tree-rat n. an arboreal rodent, as those of the West Indian genera Capromys and Plagiodon.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Rodentia or rodent > superfamily Hystricomorpha (porcupine or guinea-pig) > [noun] > family Capromyidae (hutia)
pilori1763
musk cavy1771
muskrat1774
coypu1793
nutria1811
hutia1834
hog-rat1847
tree-rat1885
1885 W. T. Hornaday Two Years in Jungle xv. 171 Two tree-rats (Mus rufescens) used to come into my hut from the jungle.
tree-runner n. a brightly coloured Australian nuthatch of the genus Neositta, esp. N. chrysoptera.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > [noun] > family Sittidae > genus Neositta (sittella)
sittella1844
tree-runner1901
1901 A. J. Campbell Nests & Eggs Austral. Birds I. 337 The true home of the Orange-winged Sittella or Tree Runner is Eastern Australia.
1964 A. L. Thomson New Dict. Birds 545/2 The so-called ‘treerunners’ or ‘sitellas’ are widely distributed in Australia.
tree-serpent n. (also tree-snake) any snake of arboreal habits, as those of the families Dendrophidæ and Dipsadidæ (both non-venomous).
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the world > animals > reptiles > order Squamata (lizards and snakes) > suborder Ophidia (snakes) > [noun] > unspecified and miscellaneous types of
worm-kinc893
slow-wormOE
hagworm?c1475
salpege1569
scytale1572
house snake1608
porphyre1608
ellops1667
sea-serpent1672
tree-serpent1731
boyuna1763
whip-snake1774
garter-snake1775
switch-snake1791
argus-snake1802
rat snake1818
skaapsteker1818
sea-snake1827
short-tail1879
roof-snake1884
brown snake1896
herald-snake1910
night snake1918
parrot snake1931
the world > animals > reptiles > order Squamata (lizards and snakes) > suborder Ophidia (snakes) > [noun] > member of (snake) > that lives in woods or trees
wood-snake1585
bush adder1611
tree-serpent1731
the world > animals > reptiles > order Squamata (lizards and snakes) > suborder Ophidia (snakes) > types of snake > [noun] > family Colubridae > member of subfamily Dipsadidae
tree-serpent1731
dipsas1841
1731 G. Medley tr. P. Kolb Present State Cape Good-Hope II. 163 The Tree-Serpent is so call'd on account of her being seen mostly in trees.
1866 R. Owen On Anat. Vertebr. I. iv. 327 Some nocturnal Tree-Snakes..have a prolonged snout.
tree-shrew n. an insectivorous animal of the genus Tupaia, a squirrel-shrew.
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the world > animals > mammals > order Scandentia (tree-shrews) > [noun] > genus Tupaia (tree-shrew)
Tupaia1820
banxring1824
tree-shrew1893
1893 R. Lydekker Royal Nat. Hist. I. 312 With the tree-shrews, or tupaias, we come to the first family of the true Insectivores.
tree-spider n. any of many spiders that live on the trunks or branches of trees.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Arachnida > [noun] > order Aranea > member of (spider) > unspecified type > that lives on trees
tree-spider1904
1904 W. H. Hudson Green Mansions ii. 33 The shaft reveals a tangle of shining silver threads—the web of some large tree-spider.
1910 W. de la Mare Three Mulla-mulgars iii. 45 They sat and ate..with scorpions and speckled tree-spiders watching them.
1934 A. Russell Tramp-royal in Wild Austral. xxxviii. 249 So strong and thickly-woven are the webs of the Central Australian tree or orchid spider that small birds are often caught in them.
tree squirrel n. an arboreal squirrel, distinguished from a ground squirrel.
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the world > animals > mammals > group Unguiculata or clawed mammal > order Rodentia or rodent > [noun] > family Sciuridae (squirrel) > genus sciurus (tree squirrel)
fox-squirrel1688
tree squirrel1822
Burmese squirrel1887
1822 J. Woods Two Years' Resid. Eng. Prairie 193 Tree-squirrels are of two or more sorts, and are eaten here.
1872 Routledge's Every Boy's Ann. 614/1 Dennis climbs like a tree squirrel.
1968 Ecol. Monogr. XXXVIII. 31 (title) The adaptive nature of social organisation in the genus of tree squirrels Tamiasciurus.
tree-tiger n. a name for the leopard ( Cent. Dict.).
tree-warbler n. a bird of the genus Hypolais (sometimes reckoned as a subgenus of Sylvia).
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > family Muscicapidae (thrushes, etc.) > subfamily Sylviidae (warbler) > [noun] > miscellaneous types of
tailor-bird1769
rubythroat1783
bush-goat1865
Cetti's warbler1875
tree-warbler1881
gnat-catcher1883
crombec1901
wren-warbler1924
1881 H. Seebohm Catal. Birds Brit. Mus. V. 78 The Icterine Tree-Warbler breeds in Central and Northern Europe, from the Atlantic to the Ural Mountains, extending northwards as far as the Arctic circle.
c. Other Special combinations.
tree-agate n. a variety of agate with dendritic or tree-like markings (cf. moss agate n. at moss n.1 Compounds 2a).
tree analysis n. Forestry (see quot. 1905)
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1905 Terms Forestry & Logging 25 Tree analysis, a series of measurements and observations upon a felled tree to determine its growth and life history.
tree bender n. (see quot. 1921).
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1921 Dict. Occup. Terms (1927) § 498 Tree bender; bends shafts or handles for scythes, shovels, etc., by placing in steam chamber [etc.]
tree-box n. a frame used to protect a young tree.
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the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > protective grating or frame for tree
coop1745
tree-box1876
1876 ‘M. Twain’ Adventures Tom Sawyer ii. 27 [Tom] sat down on the tree-box discouraged.
1896 J. C. Harris Sister Jane 157 Whittling away with his pocket-knife on the tree-box, against which he was leaning.
tree branch n. (a) a branch of a tree; (b) attributive (hyphenated) resembling the branch of a tree.
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the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > bough or branch
boughc1000
limbOE
brancha1300
trainc1390
grain1513
palm1559
arm1579
stem1584
lug-pole1773
hag wood1804
hag1808
tree branch1851
rame1858
1851 M. Reid Scalp Hunters I. x. 131 We see..the primitive plough of the forking tree-branch, scarcely scoring the soil.
1908 Practitioner Dec. 861 The ‘Tree-branch’ striations occasionally seen in skiagrams of tuberculous lungs.
1908 Practitioner Dec. 861Tree-branch’ arborescence only occurs in tuberculous patients.
tree-bridge n. (a) a wooden bridge (obsolete); (b) a bridge formed by a fallen tree.
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society > travel > means of travel > route or way > other means of passage or access > [noun] > bridge > bridge of specific materials
tree-bridge1596
pole bridge1785
clapper bridge1793
sangha1814
creeper rope1894
creeper bridge1909
society > travel > means of travel > route or way > other means of passage or access > [noun] > bridge > bridge formed by fallen tree
tree-bridge1805
tacouba1870
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1888) I. 276 Thay..casting doune the trie brig,..erected a fayre stane brig.
1805 T. E. White Jrnl. 20 July (1904) 26 I..cross'd the creek on a tree bridge an came through the woods.
1839 P. J. Bailey Festus 337 To dare the broken tree-bridge across the stream.
tree-burial n. the custom, among some peoples, of disposing of dead bodies by placing them in hollow trunks, or among the branches, of trees.
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the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > types of burial or entombment > [noun] > burial in specific place
kirk-burial1606
out-funeral1637
tree-burial1901
the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > burial > types of burial or entombment > [noun] > burial in specific type of tomb
tumulation1623
urn-burial1658
house burial1863
mound burial1865
tree-burial1901
pipe-burial1929
1901 Proc. Zool. Soc. 2 Apr. 309 In the States of Patalung and Singgora..the Siamese practise a form of tree-burial.
tree-calf n. Bookbinding see quots.
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society > communication > book > manufacture or production of books > book-binding > type of binding > [noun]
antiquing1728
royal binding1808
Russia binding1817
gothique1818
half-binding1821
Roxburghe1839
paper cover1843
trade binding1874
tree-calf1879
Grolier1880
yapp1883
cloth-work1885
publisher's binding1885
tree-marble1885
treed calf1892
presentation binding1893
quarter leather1894
quarter calf1896
three-quarter binding1897
library binding1903
circuit-binding1909
publisher's cloth1911
quarter binding1912
loose back1923
open back1923
spring-back1923
spiral binding1949
1879 Cassell's Techn. Educator (new ed.) IV. 89 A third style of ornamentation is called tree-calf.
1895 J. W. Zaehnsdorf Short Hist. Bookbinding 28 Tree Calf.—Bright brown calf stained with acids in conventional imitation of the branches of a tree.
tree-claim n. U.S. a ‘claim’ or piece of land allotted with the proviso that it shall become the property of the occupier after a fixed term on condition of his planting a certain proportion of it with trees.
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1890 L. C. D'Oyle Notches Rough Edge Life 44 I filed on the north-west quarter of 10 as a ‘homestead’, and the north-east quarter as a ‘tree-claim’.
tree-climber n. a person or animal that climbs a tree or trees; spec. (a) = tree-creeper n. 1; (b) a fish, the anabas n. or climbing perch.
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > [noun] > family Certhiidae
sugar-bird1787
sugar-eater1796
wren creeper1811
tree-creeper1814
tree-climber1879
tree-clipper1885
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > [noun] > family Certhiidae > certhia familiaris (tree-creeper)
ox-eye1544
tree-creeper1814
tree-climber1879
the world > animals > fish > superorder Acanthopterygii (spiny fins) > order Perciformes (perches) > [noun] > suborder Anabantoidei > genus Anabas > member of (tree-climber)
climbing-perch1844
tree-climber1879
1879 R. Jefferies Wild Life 175 If you sit down on the elm butt..and watch quietly, before long the little tree-climber will come.
1885 C. F. Holder Marvels Animal Life 36 The tree-climber (Anabas scandens) one of which he had..captured.
tree-clipper n. local the common tree-creeper ( Certhia familiaris).
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the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > arboreal families > [noun] > family Certhiidae
sugar-bird1787
sugar-eater1796
wren creeper1811
tree-creeper1814
tree-climber1879
tree-clipper1885
1885 C. Swainson Provinc. Names Brit. Birds 57 Tree Creeper..Tree clipper (Oxon).
tree-coffin n. a prehistoric coffin made of a hollow tree-trunk.
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the world > life > death > disposal of corpse > receptacle for remains > [noun] > coffin > coffin made of hollowed tree-trunk
oak coffin1833
tree-coffin1877
oak cist1937
1877 W. Greenwell Brit. Barrows 32 (note) Stowborough, Dorsetshire, where a body was discovered in 1767, in a tree-coffin.
tree-cop n. obsolete = treetop n.
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the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > tree-top
cropa1300
heada1387
tree-crop14..
tree-copc1425
treetop1530
crownet1578
crown1589
coma1870
stag-horn1879
c1425 St. Christina x, in Anglia VIII. 123/21 She was constreyned to flee into tree-coppys or touris, or in to oþere summe hygh þinges.
tree-coral n. a branching coral.
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the world > animals > invertebrates > subkingdom Metazoa > grade Diploblastica > phylum Coelenterata > [noun] > class Hydrozoa > order Campanulariae > member of family Sertulariidae
sea-fir1633
shrub coral1681
coralline1721
coralloid1750
sea-coralline1753
herringbone coralline1755
sea-beard1755
tree-coral1871
1871 Harper's Mag. June 28 On the confines of this channel may be seen in clear water a perfect forest of coral—tree-coral, we call it, on account of its great size.
1915 E. R. Lankester Diversions of Naturalist 11 Great tree-coral of these waters—the Paragorgia.
tree-coupling n. in a vehicle, a piece connecting a ‘single-tree’ or swingletree and a double-tree.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > parts of cart or carriage > [noun] > swingle-tree > parts or attachments of
roller bolt1796
wagon-hammer1875
tree-coupling1877
tree-iron1877
1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Tree-coupling, a piece uniting a single to a double tree.
tree-crop n. obsolete = treetop n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > tree-top
cropa1300
heada1387
tree-crop14..
tree-copc1425
treetop1530
crownet1578
crown1589
coma1870
stag-horn1879
14.. Childh. Jesus 644 in Horstm. Altengl. Leg. (1878) 120 Alle þe chyldron..In to þe tre-croppe hem toke.
1578 J. Rolland Seuin Seages 66 The hird was sair feirit..That the tre crop he suld gar turne dounwart.
tree-cult n. (also tree-cultus) = tree-worship n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > kinds of worship > [noun] > of trees
tree-worshipping1840
tree-worship1860
tree-cult1871
dendrolatry1891
1871 E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture II. xv. 202 The whole tree-cultus of the world must by no means be thrown indiscriminately into the one category.
1905 E. Clodd Animism xiv. 74 In such customs and beliefs..are the materials of the manifold tree-cults.
tree-deity n. = tree-god n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > specific thing as > tree as
god tree1681
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > of specific things > of tree
tree-spirit1871
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
1911 Encycl. Brit. XXVII. 237/1 The powers of the tree-deities.
tree-diagram n. = sense 6b(e).
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the mind > language > a language > [noun] > family of languages > diagram representing
family tree1852
Stammbaum1939
tree-diagram1965
the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > [noun] > study or science of > diagram representing structure
phrase marker1945
P-marker1955
tree1958
tree-diagram1965
tree structure1965
1965 N. Chomsky Aspects Theory Syntax i. 14 A tree-diagram of a sentence.
1978 Language 54 15 In a tree diagram, only the configuration of nodes matters, not the length of branches and sub-branches.
tree-digger n. see quot.
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the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > pruning or lopping > root-pruning > implement for
root cutter1793
tree-digger1877
1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Tree-digger, a kind of double plow employed in nurseries for cutting off the roots of trees which have been planted in rows.
tree-divination n. divination by listening to the rustling of the leaves of a tree supposed to be the seat of a deity.
ΚΠ
1921 Encycl. Relig. & Ethics XII. 455/2 Tree-divination was practised by the Ainus.
tree doctor n. = tree surgeon n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > tree surgery > tree surgeon
tree doctor1776
tree surgeon1908
arborist1914
1776 tr. Béardé de l'Abbaye Ess. Agric. vi. 37 There was a person, who assumed the title of Tree doctor.
1908 Harper's Weekly 5 Dec. 15/1 The services of the tree doctor are needed.
1976 ‘M. Albrand’ Taste of Terror xx. 115 The tree doctor..took a look at the willow.
tree-drum n. a drum made from the trunk of a tree.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > musical instrument > percussion instrument > drum > [noun] > other drums
taborinc1500
swash1533
war-drum1593
wolf-drum1605
saddle drum1617
tombak1662
tom-tom1693
goombay1790
rommelpot1790
rommelpot?1798
water drum1824
pahu1829
tabl1831
tambourin1832
dholuck1837
nagara1839
tree-drum1850
ngoma1860
talking drum1897
pot drum1907
friction drum1909
trap-drum1924
ghoema1934
tamboo1942
tassa1948
steel drum1952
conga drum1955
roto-tom1968
conga1969
Isukuti1972
steel pan1973
syndrum1979
1850 G. Cupples Green Hand viii, in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Feb. 212/1 I could make out the hollow booming of the African tree-drum.
tree farm n. originally and chiefly U.S. an area of forest managed in a way that ensures the regular production of timber.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun]
woodwork1738
arboriculture1828
forestry1859
woodworking1872
sylviculture1880
silvics1907
agroforestry1934
tree farm1941
tree farming1942
1941 N.Y. Times Mag. 9 Nov. 13/2 Instead of reseeding sketchily over immense areas, the industry is laying out ‘tree farms’.
1973 P. A. Whitney Snowfire xii. 231 He told me..about the controlled growth..on a tree farm.
1984 New Yorker 23 Jan. 78/3 Tree farms [in China] have also begun to experience problems with theft.
tree farmer n.
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the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > forester
woodyera1100
forester1297
fosterc1405
fostress?1553
sylvan1589
saltuary1674
woodsman1694
green jerkin1826
wood-farmer1831
sylviculturist1887
tree farmer1942
sylviculturalist1971
1942 Jrnl. Forestry 40 596/2 Tree farmers..should be eligible for the same..treatment as other farmers.
tree farming n.
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the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun]
woodwork1738
arboriculture1828
forestry1859
woodworking1872
sylviculture1880
silvics1907
agroforestry1934
tree farm1941
tree farming1942
1942 Jrnl. Forestry 40 596/2 Tree farming appears to be off to a good start.
1962 Times 1 Jan. 6/4 The normal clear-fell and replant industrial or ‘tree-farming’ systems of forestry.
1973 P. A. Whitney Snowfire ii. 21 Julian had gone into tree farming.
tree-feeder n. an animal that feeds on the foliage of trees or the insects living on leaves or bark.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > by eating habits > [noun] > herbivore > that feeds on trees
tree-feeder1914
1914 Chambers's Jrnl. Jan. 75/1 A species of rhinoceros..was particularly a tree-feeder.
1953 N. Tinbergen Herring Gull's World vii. 66 Great Tits..being tree-feeders, they do not peck at the ground.
tree-god n. a divinity supposed to inhabit a tree, or a tree that is an object of worship.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > specific thing as > tree as
god tree1681
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > of specific things > of tree
tree-spirit1871
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
1905 W. E. Geil Yankee in Pigmy Land v. 66 Their tree-god, hideous and ridiculous.
1911 S. A. Cooke in Encycl. Brit. XXVII. 237/2 (note) An African tree-god with priests and ‘wives’.
tree-goddess n.
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the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > specific thing as > tree as
god tree1681
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > of specific things > of tree
tree-spirit1871
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
1895 A. J. Evans in Folk-Lore Mar. 21 A Tree-Goddess akin to the Dryads of old.
tree-honey n. obsolete a sweet juice or gum exuding from certain trees.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > additive > sweetener > syrup > [noun] > other syrups
hydrosacrec1400
succadoc1530
honey roset1558
tree-honey1626
treacle1694
capillaire1754
dibs1757
syrup of capillaire1785
arrope1851
glucose1852
bush-syrup1866
palm-honey1866
moskonfyt1872
grenadine1896
pyromel1899
corn syrup1903
butterscotch1910
rose hip syrup1942
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §848 It seemeth that there was, in old time, Tree-Honey, as well as Bee-Honey.
tree-house n. (a) a house built in a tree (as by the indigenous inhabitants of New Guinea) for security against enemies; (b) a child's playhouse (sense 2) built in a tree.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > toy or plaything > other toys > [noun] > playhouse
playhouse1789
tree-house1867
Wendy house1949
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > a house > types of house > [noun] > other types of house
houseOE
showernc1175
house of fencec1425
abbey1665
park1750
trust house1751
subhouse1771
hurley-house1814
bure1843
ideal home1854
tholtan1856
picture house1858
village-house1862
tumble-down1866
tree-house1867
mazet1873
riad1881
slaughterhouse1899
whare puni1911
mas1912
social housing1928
quadruplex1939
share house1945
starter home1948
show house1957
painted lady1978
self-build1978
starter1979
Earthship1985
Queenslander1985
des res1986
common house1989
1867 J. C. Patteson in C. M. Yonge Life J. C. Patteson (1874) II. xi. 275 I am high and dry, and have..a broad ladder—up to my house. The Mahaga lads and I call it my tree-house.
1901 Wide World Mag. 6 518/1 A New Guinea tree-house.
1908 Daily Chron. 19 Mar. 6/6 A large store of ammunition in the shape of heavy stones is kept in the tree-houses, and is dropped with skill and discrimination upon the heads of..raiders.
1949 A. Wilson Wrong Set 128 Go see if she's in the Tree House... It's a kind of funny old place she and Hamish made when they were kids.
1979 R. Jaffe Class Reunion i. iv. 40 She couldn't go up in the tree house anymore.
tree-iron n. see quot.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > parts of cart or carriage > [noun] > swingle-tree > parts or attachments of
roller bolt1796
wagon-hammer1875
tree-coupling1877
tree-iron1877
1877 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Tree-irons, the irons connecting single to double trees, or the latter to the tongue of the vehicle. Also the hooks or clips by which the traces are attached.
tree-jobber n. [jobber n.2 3] obsolete a woodpecker.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > perching birds > order Piciformes > [noun] > family Picidae > genus Picus (woodpecker)
woodhackc1440
woodwall1490
woodpecker1530
woodhacker1548
woodpeck1552
woodspite1555
woodspeckc1560
modwall1572
eat-bill1598
speck1601
tree-jobber1601
hecco1604
eat-bee1608
knag1639
French pie1783
pie1783
nicker-pecker1787
rind-tabberer1848
peckerwood1859
nickle1885
nicker1886
1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny Hist. World I. x. xxix There be no wood-pecks or tree-jobbers.
tree-legged adj. obsolete or dialect wooden-legged.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medical appliances or equipment > prosthesis or spare part > [adjective] > having artificial leg
jury-legged1751
timber-toed1814
tree-legged1838
wooden-legged1840
peg-legged1861
pin-legged1884
1838 J. Ballantine in Whistle-Binkie 1st Ser. (ed. 2) 87 Ilk tree-legg'd man, ilk club-taed laddie.
tree-lifter n. see quot.
ΚΠ
1844 G. Greenwood (title) The Tree-lifter; or, a new method of transplanting Forest Trees.
tree-limit n. the line beyond which trees do not grow, with reference to either altitude or latitude; cf. tree-line n. (a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > region of the earth > zone or belt > [noun] > biogeographical zone > boundary
Wallace line1868
continental divide1869
timberline1896
tree-limit1934
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > mountain > [noun] > range > tree-limit
timber-limit1854
timberline1867
tree-line1893
tree-limit1934
the world > food and drink > farming > farm > farmland > [noun] > enclosed land or field > field systems > border or boundary of field
loaning-dike1383
hade?1523
shawa1563
rim1864
tree-limit1934
1934 Discovery June 167/1 They extend well above the local tree-limit.
1953 D. A. Bannerman Birds Brit. Isles I. 209 The typical Swedish race..and the west European race..have a very wide distribution on the continent of Europe, where their combined range extends north to the tree-limit.
tree-line n. (a) the line or level on a mountain above which no trees grow (cf. snow-line n.); (b) a row of trees; the edge of a wood.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > [noun] > relief > altitude
hypsometry1570
erection1584
erectnessa1613
tree-line1893
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > wood or assemblage of trees or shrubs > [noun] > belt or line of trees
suitc1450
neck of the woods1780
droke1822
tree-line1893
fringing forest1903
gallery forest1920
tree-belt1962
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > mountain > [noun] > range > tree-limit
timber-limit1854
timberline1867
tree-line1893
tree-limit1934
1893 Outing Aug. 346/1 We struck the tree-line again in the immense ravine between them.
1903 R. Kipling Five Nations 53 I camped above the tree-line—drifted snow and naked boulders.
1905 Westm. Gaz. 2 Sept. 2/3 Now we are high up, above the tree-line.
1936 F. Clune Roaming round Darling xiv. 123 The trail..wended down the Barwon, branching off at the various blazed tree-lines to the numerous creeks where they settled.
1977 D. Harsent Dreams of Dead 23 In single file the women left the treeline, a flicker at the corner of his eye.
tree-maker n. a maker of saddle-trees.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > animal husbandry > keeping or management of horses > horse-gear > [noun] > saddle- or harness-making > saddler or harness-maker
saddler1287
seller1311
fuster1415
collar-maker1481
saddle makerc1500
codder1507
knacker1574
fusterer1600
fustler1605
saddle-tree maker1619
saddle-carpenterc1721
tree-maker1828
whittawer1854
saddle stitcher1910
1828 Sporting Mag. 23 103 In making saddles..the trees of them are occasionally leaded by a tree-maker.
tree-man n. one of a race of men living in trees.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabitant > inhabitant by type of accommodation > [noun] > tree-dweller
tree-dweller1894
tree-man1904
1904 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 348 The horrible little tree-men discovered by Stanley.
tree-marble n. Bookbinding
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > book > manufacture or production of books > book-binding > type of binding > [noun]
antiquing1728
royal binding1808
Russia binding1817
gothique1818
half-binding1821
Roxburghe1839
paper cover1843
trade binding1874
tree-calf1879
Grolier1880
yapp1883
cloth-work1885
publisher's binding1885
tree-marble1885
treed calf1892
presentation binding1893
quarter leather1894
quarter calf1896
three-quarter binding1897
library binding1903
circuit-binding1909
publisher's cloth1911
quarter binding1912
loose back1923
open back1923
spring-back1923
spiral binding1949
1885 C. G. W. Lock Workshop Receipts 4th Ser. 266/1 Marbling on leather is produced by small drops of colouring liquids, drawn..into veins, and spread into fantastic forms resembling foliage—hence often called ‘tree-marble’.
tree-marbling n. marbling or staining in a tree-like branching pattern (cf. tree-calf n.).
tree-marking n. a tree-like or branched marking on the body of a person struck by lightning.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > blemish > [noun] > other blemishes
trench1594
French crown1600
scorch-patch1897
tree-marking1900
corona-
1900 Lancet 27 Oct. 1199/2 There was numbness in both legs and tree-marking on the left breast.
tree-milk n. a milky juice used for food, obtained from a tree or tree-like plant, as those called cow-tree n., or the cow plant n. of Sri Lanka.
tree-nest n. a nest built in a tree, in contrast to one built at ground level.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > by habitat > habitat > [noun] > dwelling place or shelter > nest
nestOE
nesta1425
nidifice1656
nidus1734
tree-nest1924
1924 J. A. Thomson Sci. Old & New x. 55 A..Tineid caterpillar, found in the tree-nest of one of the Termites.
1953 D. A. Bannerman Birds Brit. Isles I. 16 These tree-nests [of crows] are often most conspicuous.
tree-nymph n. a nymph supposed to inhabit a tree.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > classical deity > [noun] > nymph > dryad
hamadryad1390
Napaea?1553
dryad1555
sylvan1565
wood-nymph1577
sylvester1657
Napaean1753
Napaead1818
tree-nymph1831
1831 T. Keightley Mythol. Anc. Greece & Italy 206 The Tree-nymphs (Hamadryades), who were born and died with the trees.
tree-oil n. = tung oil n. at tung n. Compounds 2.
tree-path n. the track of an arboreal animal.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animals hunted > trail > [noun] > of an arboreal animal
tree-road1895
tree-path1897
1897 J. L. Allen Choir Invisible xv. 227 The grass-path or the tree-path of the cougar.
tree-people n. in fantasy or fiction: (a) persons that live in trees; (b) animated trees.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > mythical creature or object > [noun] > mythical plant or fruit
tree of mercyc1375
Sodom apple1605
apple of Sodom1635
Sodom fruit1737
Yggdrasil1770
Dead Sea fruit1817
Dead Sea apple1869
triffid1951
tree-people1954
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > fairy or elf > [noun] > nature-spirit > inhabiting woods or trees
man in the oak1584
wood-spirit1845
green man1907
tree-people1954
1954 J. R. R. Tolkien Fellowship of Ring ii. vi. 355 That was the custom of the Elves of Lórien, to dwell in the trees... Therefore they were called the Galadrim, the Tree-people.
1964 Listener 24 Dec. 1003/1 I think an intelligent plant would be large and virtually immobile; the tree-people in Olaf Stapledon's Star Maker might just qualify.
tree preservation order n. an order prohibiting the felling or removal of a tree or group of trees.
ΘΚΠ
society > law > types of laws > [noun] > specific administrative orders
compulsory purchase order1932
tree preservation order1947
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > lumbering > [noun] > tree preservation order
tree preservation order1947
the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > preservation from injury or destruction > [noun] > preservation in being or maintenance > preservation order
preservation order1912
tree preservation order1947
1943 Act 6 & 7 Geo. VI c. 29 §8 If it appears to any interim development authority that it is expedient..to make provision for the preservation of trees or woodlands..they may..make an order (in this section referred to as an ‘interim preservation order’) with respect to such trees.]
1947 L. Silkin in Hansard (Commons) 22 Apr. 779 One hundred and six tree preservation orders have been submitted for my approval.
1976 Leicester Mercury 16 July A tree preservation order has been made by the Harborough District Council to protect trees in and around the grounds of Little Bowden Rectory.
tree-protector n. a contrivance for protecting the bark of a tree from injury by destructive insects, etc. (E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. 1877).
tree-pruner n. an implement for pruning trees.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > pruning or lopping > other pruning implements
pruner1828
tree-pruner1887
1887 Illustr. Catal. Garden Furniture (J. B. Brown & Son) 83 The ‘standard’ tree pruners.
tree-pruning n. also transferred the removal of branches from a tree diagram.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > [noun] > study or science of > diagram representing structure > removal of branches from
tree-pruning1933
1933 R. Tuve Seasons & Months iv. 160 February-by-the-fire has been crowded out by putting an extra tree-pruning picture into the series.
1966 Math. Linguistics & Automatic Translation (Harvard Univ. Computation Lab.) Rep. No. NSF-17) iv–1 (heading) A proposal rule of tree-pruning.
1976 J. S. Gruber Lexical Struct. Syntax & Semantics ii. iii. 365 We will have the following four derived trees... Each of these will undergo tree-pruning.
tree-remover n. an apparatus for transplanting trees (Knight, 1877).
tree-ring n. an annual growth ring in the trunk of a tree.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > wood > [noun] > ring or layer
insertion1624
ring1664
annual ring1672
year1708
year ring1845
growth ring1907
tree-ring1919
1919 A. E. Douglass Climatic Cycles & Tree-growth iii. 23 The plan of using tree-rings for the general purpose of a check on astronomical and meteorological phenomena was first formulated in 1901.
1982 Nature 6 May 28/1 Others have sought an explanation of..variations in tree rings.
tree-ring analysis n. = dendrochronology n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > study of specific parts or types of plants > trees > dendrochronology
dendrochronology1928
tree-ring analysis1946
tree-ring dating1946
1946 F. E. Zeuner Dating Past i. 6 Tree-ring analysis is based on a well-known structural feature of wood, namely the annual growth-rings.
1977 Times 20 July 13/4 Tree-ring analysis—or..dendrochronology—can..help to date..old paintings on oak panel.
tree-ring dating n. = dendrochronology n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > botany > [noun] > study of specific parts or types of plants > trees > dendrochronology
dendrochronology1928
tree-ring analysis1946
tree-ring dating1946
1946 F. E. Zeuner Dating Past 11 The scope of tree-ring dating is extending rapidly.
tree-road n. = tree-path n. above.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > animals hunted > trail > [noun] > of an arboreal animal
tree-road1895
tree-path1897
1895 R. Kipling Second Jungle Bk. 218 When he tired of ground-going he threw up his hands monkey-fashion to the nearest creeper,..he would follow a tree-road till his mood changed.
tree-rune n. one of a set of runes or alphabetic characters of branched or tree-like form.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > writing > written character > [noun] > rune > type of
rune tree1863
tree-rune1863
bough-runes1866
twig-rune1866
1863 J. M. Mitchell Mesehowe 49 The six tree Runes form the word Arrier.
1901 Trans. Yorks. Dial. Soc. May 82 An inscription in the cryptic characters, sometimes called ‘tree-runes’.
tree-scraper n. an implement for scraping moss, dead bark, etc. from trees (Knight, 1877).
tree scribe n. = scratcher n. 2e.
ΚΠ
1905 Terms Forestry & Logging 25 Tree scribe.
tree search n. a search in which a situation or entity is represented by a tree diagram, e.g. to facilitate efficient searching.
ΘΚΠ
society > computing and information technology > programming language > program or code > [noun] > set of instructions > search
tree search1970
1970 O. Dopping Computers & Data Processing xxii. 362 Tree search and heuristic programming cover a wide field of problems and are in principle well suited for automatic computation.
1980 Daily Tel. 26 May 10/6 In a complex game, a computer normally moves after conducting a ‘tree search’ of all possible moves, a process which if unlimited by time, would take billions of years.
tree-spirit n. a spirit believed to inhabit a tree (cf. tree-god n., tree-nymph n.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > deity > [noun] > of specific things > of tree
tree-spirit1871
tree-goddess1895
tree-god1905
tree-deity1911
1871 E. B. Tylor Primitive Culture I. xi. 430 The belief in tree-spirits, and the practice of tree-worship.
1897 Daily News 1 May 8/1 Our Jack-in-the-Green was originally the human embodiment of the tree spirit.
tree-stone n. Obsolete a precious stone having tree-like markings (cf. tree-agate n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > gem or precious stone > other gems or precious stones > [noun]
hepatitec1305
ligurec1305
bdellium1382
chodchod1382
nevyn1393
asteritea1398
medusa1398
myrrhitea1398
astrion1398
emastycec14..
pinkardinec1400
iralc1420
oriel?a1425
serpentine1426
nakettec1450
pentestc1450
sun's gemc1475
sepulchre-stone1489
moonstonea1500
piantea1500
efestide1567
astroite1569
polyp stone1583
bedle1591
balanite1601
eshime1613
lyncury1638
asteria1646
pangony1658
palasin1678
palatine1678
rhombite1688
tree-stone1698
toad's eye1747
peacock stone1753
turquoise1796
odontolite1819
pagoda stone1860
tangiwai1863
fish-eye1882
1698 J. Fryer New Acct. E.-India & Persia 215 Tree-stones. Stones with the lively Representation or Form of a Tree thereon.
tree stool n. the stump of a fallen tree as preserved in a peatbog.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > part of plant > part of tree or woody plant > [noun] > stump
stock862
moreeOE
stub967
zuche1358
stumpc1440
scrag1567
stool1577
brock1772
stow1774
hagsnar1796
stab1807
spronk1838
tree stool1898
1898 Geogr. Jrnl. 11 431 The deeply submerged peats and tree-stools indicated..that the post-glacial recovery brought the land-level almost to normal pre-glacial conditions.
1975 J. G. Evans Environment Early Man Brit. Isles vi. 140 Peat now covers these hills, but..they..were once forested as is shown by the presence of tree stools at the base of the peat.
tree structure n. a structure in which there are successive branchings or subdivisions; cf. tree-diagram n. above.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > graph or diagram > [noun] > diagram > tree diagram
tree1857
subtree1935
tree structure1965
the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > syntax or word order > [noun] > study or science of > diagram representing structure
phrase marker1945
P-marker1955
tree1958
tree-diagram1965
tree structure1965
1965 N. Chomsky Aspects Theory Syntax i. 12 The most obvious formal property of utterances is their bracketing into constituents of various types, that is, the ‘tree structure’ associated with them.
1971 Computers & Humanities 5 292 Special language facilities in the fields of list processing, string processing, tree structure operations.
1983 Austral. Microcomputer Mag. Aug. 51/2 WangNet's cable topology is a duplicated tree structure.
tree surgeon n. a practitioner of tree surgery.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > tree surgery > tree surgeon
tree doctor1776
tree surgeon1908
arborist1914
1908 Harper's Weekly 5 Dec. 15/1 The attention given by the tree surgeon to the aged and decaying historical trees of the country..is equal to that given a wealthy invalid by his physician.
1978 Cornish Guardian 27 Apr. 19/1 (advt.) Tree Surgeons. Fully qualified and insured for all felling, planting, pruning and repair work.
tree surgery n. the pruning, repair, and preservative treatment of ornamental trees, first professionally organized by John Davey (1846–1923), American landscape architect.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [noun] > tree surgery
tree surgery1902
1902 J. Davey Tree Doctor 14 Learn to do your own tree surgery, or direct it personally.
1973 Country Life 7 June 1706/3 (advt.) Southern Tree Surgery Company (Consultants and Tree Surgeons).
tree-tally n. (see tally n.1 7c).
ΚΠ
1910 Chambers's Jrnl. 143/1 The tree-tallies are pierced at one end with a small hole for attachment to the tree.
tree-turned adj. obsolete turned or changed into a tree.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > [adjective] > turned into a tree
tree-turned1605
1605 J. Sylvester tr. Vrania in tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. 538 That sacred Tree-turn'd Lady..From whose pure locks your still-green Laurels grow.
tree turner n. (see quot. 1921).
ΚΠ
1881 Instr. Census Clerks (1885) 173 Tree Turner (Spade Handles).
1921 Dict. Occup. Terms (1927) § 486 Treeturner; a turner who shapes wooden handles of spades and shovels on a lathe.
tree-village n. a village consisting of tree-houses.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > district in relation to human occupation > town as opposed to country > village > [noun] > other types of village
post village1673
mill village1834
lake-settlement1863
pile village1863
lake-village1865
lake-hamlet1878
pile settlement1878
garden village1892
tree-village1901
model village1906
street village1928
strategic hamlet1963
1901 Field 27 Apr. 572/2 Another tree village.., where I saw three houses erected on one tree.
tree-wax n. any kind of wax produced from a tree, as Chinese wax, Japan wax.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > waxy materials > [noun] > derived from plants
vegetable wax1721
wax1799
tree-wax1857
plant wax1924
1857 W. A. Miller Elements Chem. (1862) III. 267 The tree wax of Japan consists of pure palmitin.
tree-wool n. a woolly substance obtained from a tree, as pine-wool n. at pine n.2 Compounds 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > other textiles obtained from plants > [noun]
flax1553
vegetable silka1660
pulu1833
ramie1851
moc-main1857
China-grass1858
tree-wool1870
istle1883
arghan1922
1870 D. Rock Textile Fabrics (S. Kensington Mus.) Introd. p. xiv Another corslet..was likewise embroidered with gold and tree-wool.
tree-work n. obsolete work in wood, carpentry.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > constructing or working with wood > [noun]
tree-workc1275
carpentry1377
wrightinga1500
wrightrya1500
carpenter-work?1553
carpentership1574
wright-work1630
chipping trade1792
carpentering1838
woodcraft1853
woodworking1872
axemanship1893
woodwork1913
c1275 (?a1200) Laȝamon Brut (Calig.) (1978) l. 11427 Ich con of treo-wrekes [= -werkes: c1300 Otho treo-workes] wunder feole craftes.
tree-worker n. Obsolete a carpenter.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > worker > workers according to type of work > manual or industrial worker > workers with specific materials > woodworker > [noun] > carpenter
carpenterc1325
tree-workera1382
timberman1466
carpentaries1486
chip1784
caseworker1860
chippy1881
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Isa. xliv. 12 The crafti man tree werkere.
tree-worship n. worship rendered to trees or to the spirits supposed to inhabit them.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > kinds of worship > [noun] > of trees
tree-worshipping1840
tree-worship1860
tree-cult1871
dendrolatry1891
1860 E. S. Poole in W. Smith Dict. Bible I. 95/2 The stone-worship, tree-worship, &c., of various tribes.
tree-worshipper n.
tree-worshipping n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > worship > kinds of worship > [noun] > of trees
tree-worshipping1840
tree-worship1860
tree-cult1871
dendrolatry1891
1840 Thorpe Anc. Laws II. 249 We forbid..tree worshipings [OE. treowwurþunga].
C3. Phrases with of.
a.
tree of the knowledge of good and evil n.
b.
tree of Buddha n. = bo tree n.
tree of chastity n. = agnus castus n. ( Treasury Bot.); also called chaste-tree (chaste adj. 9).
tree of Diana n. see Diana n. 2, and cf. 6b(a).
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > crystallography (general) > crystal (general) > crystal habit > [noun] > tree-like
tree1706
arborization1794
tree of Dianac1820
c1820 Philos. Recreat. 131 A curious Chemical Experiment, called the Tree of Diana. Note, This is the modern silver tree.
1849 J. R. Jackson Lett. Minerals 287 A pretty metallic vegetation in glass jars:..called the Tree of Diana.
tree of heaven n. = ailanthus n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > tree or shrub groups > sumacs > [noun]
buck's-horna1450
rhus?1541
sumac1548
Venice sumac1597
poisonwood1671
poison tree1676
swamp sumac1722
urushi1727
stag-horn1753
Venetian sumac1755
poison ash1757
ipoh1779
poison sumac1785
ailanthus tree1789
Japan varnish1789
vinegar-plant1797
mountain sumac1813
poison dogwood1814
upas1814
karee1815
fustet1821
taaibos1821
poison elder1822
varnish sumac1822
Japan lacquer1835
tree of heaven1845
anacard1847
smoke plant1856
tanners' sumac1858
swamp dogwood1859
smoke-tree1860
wax-tree1866
wig-sumac1867
wig-tree1867
burnwood1874
vinegar-tree1874
mountain manchineel1884
valley of death tree1888
sugar-bush1900
smoke bush1902
1845 H. B. Hirst Poems 158 O'er me let a green Ailanthus grow..the Tree of Heaven.
1898 Daily News 31 May 5/3 Some handsome specimens of tropical trees—the tree of heaven and the tulip tree.
tree of Jesse n. see Jesse n.1
tree of knowledge n. (a) loosely used as = tree of liberty n.; (b) a figurative or symbolic expression for knowledge in general, comprising all its ‘branches’.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > scholarly knowledge, erudition > large amount of knowledge > [noun]
encyclopaedia1531
cyclopaedia1636
pansophy1642
pantology1813
tree of knowledge1848
library-
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. ii. B The tre of life in the myddest of the garden, and the tre of knowlege of good and euell.
1848 J. R. Lowell Fable for Critics (ed. 2) 766 Their backs he salutes With the whole tree of knowledge torn up by the roots.
tree of liberty n. a tree (or a pole) planted in celebration of a revolution or victory securing liberty (chiefly in reference to the French Revolution); also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > lack of subjection > freedom or liberty > liberation > [noun] > symbol of
cap of liberty1709
tree of liberty1765
liberty pole1769
liberty tree1769
1765 Universal Mag. 37 376/2 Known by the name of the Tree of Liberty ever since the memorable 14th of August.
1837 T. Carlyle French Revol. II. i. xii. 90 A Tree of Liberty sixty feet high; and Phrygian Cap on it, of size enormous.
1890 W. E. H. Lecky Hist. Eng. 18th Cent. VII. xxvii. 207 Trees of liberty had been planted in Antrim, and bonfires lit in consequence of French victories.
tree of life n. (a) a tree symbolic of life or immortality, esp. that in the narrative of the garden of Eden (Genesis ii. 9, etc.); also figurative; (b) a shrub of the genus Thuya; = arbor vitae n. 1; (c) Anatomy = arbor vitae n. 2; (d) a schematized representation of a tree or shrub used as an artistic motif, esp. in eastern work; frequently attributive.
ΚΠ
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) Gen. ii. 9 The tree of lijf in the mydle of paradys.
1599 J. Davies Nosce Teipsum 87 But truth, which is eternall, feeds the mind; The tree of life which will not let her dye.
1712 J. Petiver in Philos. Trans. 1710–12 (Royal Soc.) 27 423 American Tree of Life.
1760 J. Lee Introd. Bot. App. 317 Tree of Life, Thuya.
1880 G. C. M. Birdwood Industr. Arts India 336 The tree of life represented on modern Yarkand rugs is always a pomegranate tree.
1913 R. C. Maclagan Our Ancestors viii. 121 There was another locality for the Tree of Life.
1931 A. U. Dilley Oriental Rugs & Carpets Pl. 57 (caption) Beluchistan Prayer Rug with Rectangular Niche and Tree of Life.
1960 B. L. Snook Eng. Hist. Embroidery 81 Hangings worked in polychrome,..with flowing stems or a Persian ‘Tree of Life’ rising from a ground of grass-grown mole hills.
1972 Islander (Victoria, Brit. Columbia) 28 May 5/2 A most recently finished piece [of weaving] is done in the universal tree-of-life symbol.
1977 Times 25 June 2/3 A Kashan silk Tree of Life rug..made £3,000.
tree of mercy n. in medieval legend, the allegorical tree which yielded the oil of mercy, and was at length to bear Christ for the healing of humankind.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > compassion > [noun] > mercy
milceeOE
mildheartnesseOE
oreOE
mildheartlaikc1175
mercya1225
misericordc1230
pitya1250
gracec1300
mildheadc1300
milcefulnessa1333
pietya1350
tree of mercyc1375
miserationa1382
mildc1390
piteousnessa1393
miltha1400
milthnessa1400
blithec1400
mercifulnessc1429
misericordy1479
mildfulness1489
clemence1490
clemency1553
pardon1555
pitifulness1555
milk of human kindnessa1616
mussy1823
mild-heartedness1849
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > mythical creature or object > [noun] > mythical plant or fruit
tree of mercyc1375
Sodom apple1605
apple of Sodom1635
Sodom fruit1737
Yggdrasil1770
Dead Sea fruit1817
Dead Sea apple1869
triffid1951
tree-people1954
c1375 Canticum de Creatione 620 in Horstmann Altengl. Leg. (1878) 132 And to þe tre of mercy blyf Where out renneþ oyle of lyf His angel wil doun sende.
c1375 Canticum de Creatione 620 in Horstmann Altengl. Leg. (1878) 695 To haue mercy on Adam,..And hem senden his angel fro hy To ȝeuen hem of þe tre of mercy Oyle, to helen him wyth.
tree of Paradise n. the plantain ( Musa paradisiaca).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fruit-tree or -plant > [noun] > tropical or exotic fruit-tree or -plant > banana tree > plantain tree
platano1555
tree of Paradise1567
plantain tree1582
plantain1585
rose plantain1597
plane1604
mauz1681
Moko1911
?a1500 Chester Pl. ii. 199 And of that tree of Paradise she shall eate through my coyntice; For women are full liccoris [v.r. licorous].]
1567 J. Maplet Greene Forest f. 63 The tree of Paradise saith Cardane, is of short life, for the second yeare his bodie drieth vp and waxeth barraine: It beareth fruit like a cluster of Grapes, but in bignesse of an Apple.
Categories »
tree of Porphyry n. Logic = Porphyrian tree n. at Porphyrian adj.1 and n. Compounds.
tree of the universe n. the mythical ash-tree or Yggdrasil of Scandinavian mythology.
tree of wisdom n. = tree of Buddha n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > symbol (general) > non-Christian symbols or images > [noun] > bush or tree
wren-bush1901
tree of wisdom1910
1910 Encycl. Brit. IV. 739/1 The sacred Bo tree or tree of wisdom.

Phrases

at the top of the tree, in the highest position: see top n.1 28. up a tree (colloquial, originally U.S.), debarred from escape, like a hunted animal driven to take refuge in a tree; entrapped; in an awkward position, in a difficulty or ‘fix’. money (etc.) does not grow on trees (originally U.S.): money (etc.) is not easily obtainable; out of (one's) tree (U.S. slang) (see quot. 1971). one cannot see the wood for the trees: see wood n.1 5g.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > lack of understanding > stupidity, dullness of intellect > [adjective]
sloweOE
stuntc960
dullOE
hardOE
stuntlyc1000
sotc1050
dillc1175
dulta1225
simplea1325
heavy1340
astonedc1374
sheepishc1380
dull-witteda1387
lourd1390
steerishc1411
ass-likea1425
brainless?a1439
deafc1440
sluggishc1450
short-witted1477
obtuse1509
peakish1519
wearish1519
deaf, or dumb as a beetle1520
doileda1522
gross1526
headlessa1530
stulty1532
ass-headed1533
pot-headed1533
stupid?1541
sheep's head1542
doltish1543
dumpish1545
assish1548
blockish1548
slow-witted1548
blockheaded1549
surd1551
dull-headed1552
hammer-headed1552
skit-brained?1553
buzzardly1561
witless1562
log-headeda1566
assy1566
sottish1566
dastardly1567
stupidious1567
beetle-headed1570
calvish1570
bluntish1578
cod's-headed1578
grout-headed1578
bedaft1579
dull-pated1580
blate1581
buzzard-like1581
long-eared1582
dullard1583
woodena1586
duncical1588
leaden-headed1589
buzzard1592
dorbellical1592
dunstical1592
heavy-headeda1593
shallow-brained1592
blunt-witted1594
mossy1597
Bœotian1598
clay-brained1598
fat1598
fat-witted1598
knotty-pated1598
stupidous1598
wit-lost1599
barren1600
duncifiedc1600
lourdish1600
stockish1600
thick1600
booby1603
leaden-pated1603
partless1603
thin-headed1603
leaden-skulledc1604
blockhead1606
frost-brained1606
ram-headed1608
beef-witted1609
insulse1609
leaden-spirited1609
asininec1610
clumse1611
blockheadly1612
wattle-headed1613
flata1616
logger-headeda1616
puppy-headeda1616
shallow-patedc1616
thick-brained1619
half-headed1621
buzzard-blinda1625
beef-brained1628
toom-headed1629
thick-witted1634
woollen-witted1635
squirrel-headed1637
clod-pated1639
lean-souled1639
muddy-headed1642
leaden-witteda1645
as sad as any mallet1645
under-headed1646
fat-headed1647
half-witted1647
insipid1651
insulsate1652
soft-headed1653
thick-skulleda1657
muddish1658
non-intelligent1659
whey-brained1660
sap-headed1665
timber-headed1666
leather-headeda1668
out of (one's) tree1669
boobily1673
thoughtless1673
lourdly1674
logger1675
unintelligenta1676
Bœotic1678
chicken-brained1678
under-witted1683
loggerhead1684
dunderheaded1692
unintelligible1694
buffle-headed1697
crassicc1700
numbskulled1707
crassous1708
doddy-polled1708
haggis-headed1715
niddy-noddy1722
muzzy1723
pudding-headed1726
sumphish1728
pitcher-souleda1739
duncey1743
hebete1743
chuckheaded1756
dumb1756
duncely1757
imbecile1766
mutton-headed1768
chuckle-headed1770
jobbernowl1770
dowfarta1774
boobyish1778
wittol1780
staumrel1787
opaquec1789
stoopid1791
mud-headed1793
borné1795
muzzy-headed1798
nog-headed1800
thick-headed1801
gypit1804
duncish1805
lightweight1809
numbskull1814
tup-headed1816
chuckle-pate1820
unintellectuala1821
dense1822
ninnyish1822
dunch1825
fozy1825
potato-headed1826
beef-headed1828
donkeyish1831
blockheadish1833
pinheaded1837
squirrel-minded1837
pumpkin-headed1838
tomfoolish1838
dundering1840
chicken-headed1842
like a bump on a log1842
ninny-minded1849
numbheadeda1852
nincompoopish1852
suet-brained1852
dolly1853
mullet-headed1853
sodden1853
fiddle-headed1854
numb1854
bovine1855
logy1859
crass1861
unsmart1861
off his chump1864
wooden-headed1865
stupe1866
lean-minded1867
duffing1869
cretinous1871
doddering1871
thick-head1873
doddling1874
stupido1879
boneheaded1883
woolly-headed1883
leaden-natured1889
suet-headed1890
sam-sodden1891
dopey1896
turnip-headed1898
bonehead1903
wool-witted1905
peanut-headed1906
peanut-brained1907
dilly1909
torpid-minded1909
retardate1912
nitwitted1917
meat-headed1918
mug1922
cloth-headed1925
loopy1925
nitwit1928
lame-brained1929
dead from the neck up1930
simpy1932
nail-headed1936
square-headed1936
dingbats1937
pinhead1939
dim-witted1940
pea-brained1942
clueless1943
lobotomized1943
retarded1949
pointy-headed1950
clottish1952
like a stunned mullet1953
silly (or crazy) as a two-bob watch1954
out to lunch1955
pin-brained1958
dozy1959
eejity1964
out of one's tiny mind1965
doofus1967
twitty1967
twittish1969
twatty1975
twattish1976
blur1977
dof1979
goofus1981
dickheaded1991
dickish1991
numpty1992
cockish1996
the mind > goodness and badness > quality of being good > pre-eminence > [phrase]
at the top of the tree1669
the mind > possession > acquisition > acquisition or loss [phrase] > money is not easily obtainable
money (etc.) does not grow on trees1669
the world > relative properties > quantity > insufficiency > [phrase] > not abundant
money (etc.) does not grow on trees1669
in short supply1804
thin on the ground1951
1669 W. Winstanley Poor Robin sig. B8 Minc'd Pyes do not grow upon every tree, But search the Ovens for them, and there they be.
1750 W. Chancellor Diary Nov. in Pennsylvania Mag. Hist. & Biogr. (1968) XCII. 471 Africa, where tis so falsly said, that Gold grows on the Trees.
a1777 S. Foote Cozeners (1778) i. 16 Master Moses is an absolute Proteus; in every elegance, at the top of the tree.
1782 F. Burney Cecilia II. iv. x. 255 I thought to have seen him at the top of the tree, as one may say!
1787 Amer. Museum II. 383 When the new government is established, ‘money will grow upon the trees’.
1825 J. Neal Brother Jonathan II. 103 If I didn't—I'm up a tree—that's a fact.
1833 F. Marryat Peter Simple Aug. 302/2 Clothes don't grow upon trees in ould Ireland.
1839 W. M. Thackeray Major Gahagan v I had her in my power—up a tree, as the Americans say.
1857 T. Hughes Tom Brown's School Days i. vi*. 152 ‘What a pull,’ said he, ‘that it's lie-in-bed, for I shall be as lame as a tree, I think.’
1932 W. McFee Harbourmaster xxi. 371 Can I make money? Does it grow on trees out there?
1964 J. Aiken Black Hearts in Battersea (1965) iv. 51 You'll be wanting it yourself come dinner-time. Sausages don't grow on trees in London.
1966 Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) 1 ii. 6 Tree, mind, esp. in the expression ‘drive one out of one's tree’... She drives me right out of my tree.
1971 E. E. Landy Underground Dict. 143 Out of one's tree, expression meaning (1) be thinking, talking or acting in an irrational way—e.g. You are talking out of your tree or (2) be in an unfamiliar place.
1976 N. Thornburg Cutter & Bone ii. 45 ‘We is duh [= the] loanees.’ ‘You're out of your tree.’
1977 ‘S. Woods’ Thief or Two 118 I don't imagine these things [sc. jewels] grow on trees.

Draft additions March 2003

tree-hugger n. chiefly U.S. a person who cares for trees or the environment, an environmentalist (usually depreciative); (also literal) a person who adopts a position embracing a tree to prevent it from being felled.
ΚΠ
1965 Appleton (Wisconsin) Post Crescent 10 Sept. 1/4 The battle was between the tree huggers and the city. The city won, 100-0.
1977 Washington Post 7 Oct. (Weekend section) 1/1 Leaves are starting to turn now... Tree huggers predict colors will be most vibrant starting Oct. 15. (‘Tree huggers’ is what rangers assigned to the Washington area call themselves.)
1982 N.Y. Times 8 May 23/6Tree hugger’, some mutter, and I would say it myself before them. After all, I have not yet met an environmentalist who refuses to drive a car.
1990 R. Scarce Eco-warriors ii. viii. 157 Mahatma Gandhi's spirit also resides in the Chipko Movement, India's tree huggers.
2000 Truck & Driver Nov. 9/2 Britain is totally dependent on..the cheap and easy availability of fossil fuel; you don't need to be a tree-hugger to realise that this can't go on forever.

Draft additions March 2003

tree-hugging n. (a) adj. clinging to a tree; spec. (usually depreciative) of environmentalists and their activities; (hence) designating or relating to environmental issues generally (see tree-hugger n. at Additions); (b) n.the action of embracing a tree, esp. in order to prevent it from being felled; (usually in extended, frequently depreciative use) environmentalist activity.
ΚΠ
1978 N.Y. Times 23 Apr. cn6 A tree-hugging four-foot-high carved-oak monkey that once graced the corner of a Barnum & Bailey circus wagon..will be seen at the 14th annual Southport-Westport Antiques Show.
1983 Economist (Nexis) 5 Mar. 102 The remarkable Chipko Andolan (tree-hugging) movement started in Uttar Pradesh in 1973, when tree-fellers were prevented from cutting down trees by villagers.
1987 San Diego Union-Tribune (Nexis) 1 Oct. b11 That is an important truth which often is obscured by rhetoric about ‘greedy developers,’..or ‘tree-hugging environmentalists’.
1992 M. Anderson Imposters in Temple v. 183 Wilderness skills (introduction to living and traveling in the wilderness; emphasis on interpersonal relations..environmental issues, and tree hugging).
2000 Church Times 26 May 10/1 One might think that the Prince was part Luddite, part tree-hugging eco-mystic.

Draft additions December 2013

The pattern of historical relationships between species or other taxonomic groups resulting from divergence as a consequence of evolution or selective breeding; (also) a diagram or theoretical model of such relationships. Frequently with modifying word, as evolutionary tree, genealogical tree, phylogenetic tree, etc. Cf. also family tree n. 3.
ΚΠ
1792 J. S. Barr tr. Comte de Buffon Nat. Hist. V. 339 To give a clearer idea of the different kinds of dogs, of their degeneration in different climates, and of the mixture of their breed, I subjoin a kind of genealogical tree [Fr. arbre généalogique], in which all the different varieties may easily be distinguished. The shepherd's dog is the stock or body of the tree.
1817 W. Johnston tr. J. Beckmann Hist. Inventions & Disc. (ed. 3) IV. 268 We might form a genealogical tree of them [sc. the varieties or cultivars of Brassica oleracea]..; but a genealogical tree without proofs is as of little value in natural history as in claims for hereditary titles and estates.
1899 Science 29 Dec. 968/2 In a pictorial phylogenetic tree the type of the ganoid is given as the ‘gar-pike’.
1914 F. Rothwell tr. E. Boutroux Nat. Law in Sci. & Philos. x. 144 The followers of Lamarck and Darwin..are endeavouring to draw up the genealogical tree of species.
1992 Discover May 19/2 In a cladistic analysis, one tries to determine how a number of organisms are related and arrange them on the most plausible evolutionary tree—or cladogram..—by focusing on certain key characteristics.
2008 T. Audesirk et al. Biology (ed. 8) vii. 367/1 Notice the positions on the tree of the four human viruses (two strains of HIV-1 and two of HIV-2).

Draft additions June 2015

tree of life n. the evolving and diversifying totality of living organisms, likened to a branching tree; (hence) a branching diagram representing the evolutionary relationships between organisms; a phylogenetic tree.
ΚΠ
1859 C. Darwin Origin of Species iv. 130 As buds give rise by growth to fresh buds, and these, if vigorous, branch out and overtop on all sides many a feebler branch, so by generation I believe it has been with the great Tree of Life.
1888 J. Le Conte Evol. i. i. 14 A growing tree branches and again branches in all directions... Even so the tree of life, by the law of differentiation, branches and rebranches continually.
1930 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) B. 218 263 Our present conception of classification, represented as the branches of the great ‘Tree of Life’, is based on this principle.
1980 Dædalus Spring 50 Lamarck a century earlier forced the ramifying tree of life into a primary component of rising complexity.
2009 J. A. Coyne Why Evol. is True vii. 195 Speciation is a splitting event, in which each ancestral branch splits into two twigs, which themselves split later, and so on as the tree of life ramifies.

Draft additions June 2016

treemap n. Computing a diagram which presents hierarchically structured data in the form of nested rectangles, the area and colour of each rectangle typically corresponding to certain variable properties and values in the data; (also) an algorithm which produces such a graphical representation of data.
ΚΠ
1992 B. Shneiderman in ACM Trans. Graphics 11 92 (title) Tree visualization with tree-maps: 2-d space-filling approach.
1996 C. V. Jones Visualization & Optimization xiii. 266 The real value of treemaps lies in their ability to display extremely large trees.
2003 B. B. Bederson in B. B. Bederson & B. Shneiderman Craft of Information Visualization ii. 69/2 Treemaps are designed to be applied hierarchically, so any given resulting rectangle can itself contain a treemap, and so on, recursively.
2012 N.Y. Times (National ed.) 19 July b8/3 If you do not feel like poking around your drive to see where large batches of files are hiding, running a tree map program..can give you a quick visual clue to where all your drive space has gone.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

treev.

Etymology: < tree n.
1.
a. intransitive with it: To grow into a tree, attain the size of a tree. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > by growth or development > defined by habit > tree or woody plant > characterized by habit > grow in a specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > grow or attain height
risea1500
tree1650
1650 T. Fuller Pisgah-sight of Palestine ii. x. 210 Authors have affirmed, that..hyssope doth tree it in Judea.
b. intransitive. To take a tree-like or branching form, as a deposit from a solution under the influence of an electric current.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > electromagnetic radiation > electricity > electric current > take tree-like form [verb (intransitive)]
tree1884
1884 Science 17 Oct. 392/1 It will not prevent treeing..which is one of the most serious defects of the Faure battery.
2.
a. transitive. To drive into or up a tree; to cause to take refuge in a tree, as a hunted animal, or a man pursued by a wild beast. (In quot. 1854 reflexive = sense 3.) Also figurative to put into a difficulty or ‘fix’ (cf. up a tree at tree n. Phrases).
ΘΚΠ
the world > movement > progressive motion > order of movement > following behind > follow [verb (transitive)] > pursue > pursue into specific place
house1592
tree1699
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew Tree the Martern, Dislodge him.
1834 C. A. Davis Lett. J. Downing, Major xxxii. 266 It wasn't long afore he tree'd a rakoon.
1854 H. D. Thoreau Walden 250 Some small squirrel which has treed itself for scrutiny.
1859 H. Kingsley Recoll. G. Hamlyn v It's no use,..you are treed, and you can't help yourself. If I give information you swing.
b. Fox-hunting: see quot. 1781.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [verb (transitive)] > hunt fox > tree a fox
tree1781
1781 P. Beckford Thoughts on Hunting xvi. 202 In some countries..they have a method of treeing him; it is of use to make the hounds eager.
3. intransitive. To climb up or perch upon a tree; esp. to take refuge in a tree from a hunter or pursuer.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > thing hunted or game > action of game > [verb (intransitive)]
to stand, be (abide obs.) at bayc1314
to steal awayc1369
stalla1425
starta1425
rusec1425
beatc1470
lodgec1470
trason1486
rouse1532
angle1575
bolt1575
to take squat1583
baya1657
watch1677
fall1697
tree1699
to go away1755
to sink the wind1776
to get up1787
to go to ground1797
lie1797
to stand up1891
fly1897
the world > action or operation > safety > protection or defence > refuge or shelter > take or seek refuge [verb (intransitive)] > specific
wood1538
earth1611
tree1699
1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew A Martern Treeth, Lodgeth.
1834 J. Hall Kentucky II. 191 The raccoon..when the tree fell..was completely surrounded by his enemies, who took care to prevent him from again ‘treeing’.
1866 Reader 3 Nov. 908 In America everything seems to ‘tree’ or perch—quail, grouse, snipes, and, lastly, foxes.
1902 P. Fountain Great Mountains & Forests S. Amer. v. 129 Then the hunter must tree for his life.
4. transitive. To plant with trees. (Mostly in past participle; cf. treed adj. 1.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > forestry or arboriculture > [verb (transitive)] > plant with trees
setc1290
arbust1623
co-afforest1655
wood1807
retimber1828
reafforest1834
reforest1836
afforest1843
forest1865
reforestize1890
tree1891
1891 ‘A. Thomas’ That Affair II. ix. 144 A secluded spot, well treed and shrubbed in.
5. Technical senses.
a. To furnish with an (axle-)tree.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > machine > parts of machines > wheel > furnish with wheel(s) [verb (transitive)] > furnish with specific parts
ax1481
box1482
spoke1720
tree1765
spindle1833
collet1884
1765 Museum Rusticum 4 lix. 250 The edges of new wheels wear off much faster than the edges of old ones; and if treed a small matter wider, or narrower, the impediment is greatly encreased.
b. To stretch or shape upon a tree, as a boot or saddle: see tree n. 5d, 5e.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making footwear > make footwear [verb (transitive)] > carry out other processes
coupa1300
foot1465
unsole1598
close1801
galosha1817
top-piece1830
tree1856
sprig1885
knife1888
to knock up1905
spring1905
1856 Chambers's Jrnl. 5 26/2 A Wellington boot beautifully ‘treed’ and polished.
c. To fit (a spade, pick, etc.) with a wooden handle.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > manufacturing processes > making tools, equipment, or fastenings > make tools, equipment, or fastenings [verb (transitive)] > furnish tool with handle
haftc1430
helvec1440
stave1542
steal1543
handle1600
shaft1611
stouk1686
tree1864
1864 G. L. M. Strauss et al. England's Workshops 94 The holes for the nails and rivets are then punched out, and the tool [sc. a shovel] is finally treed up.
d. To provide with supporting timbers or beams, as the roof of a coal-mine.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > industry > building or constructing > building or providing with specific parts > build or provide with specific parts [verb (transitive)] > provide with beams or supports
needle1502
joista1615
pillar1711
truss1823
strut1828
tree1887
girder1938
beam-
1887 P. McNeill Blawearie 76 To warn the men to have their wall-faces all cleared up, and their roofs well treed.

Derivatives

ˈtreeing n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Galliformes (fowls) > family Tetraonidae (grouse) > [noun] > member of (grouse) > perching in trees
treeing1884
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > tailoring or making clothes > making footwear > [noun] > processes involved in > shaping
blockinga1877
lasting1880
treeing1884
1884 [see sense 1b].
1885 Newhall in Harper's Mag. Jan. 286/2 Wax finishes are so generally used for men's shoes that ‘treeing’ and ‘dressing’ with gum and blacking..are important.
1902 Daily Chron. 28 July 3/3 The American grouse differs essentially..from the British variety. All the different kinds frequently perch on trees; in fact..this habit of ‘treeing’ is characteristic of the breed.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1914; most recently modified version published online June 2021).
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