sycamore in English

noun
1
an American plane tree.
Somewhat smaller than the American sycamore , bloodgood has slightly smaller leaves and a more greenish tinge overall.
2
a large Eurasian maple with winged fruits, native to central and southern Europe.
Indigenous oak, elm, birch and ash forests are no longer under threat from development but from the intrusion of species such as sycamore and beech, which migrated to the country in the middle ages.
noun

Use "sycamore" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "sycamore" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "sycamore", or refer to the context using the word "sycamore" in the English Dictionary.

1. Buttonwood definition, sycamore (def

2. Chemistry and Physiology of ‘Dormins’ In Sycamore: Identity of Sycamore ‘Dormin’ with Abscisin II

3. Again -- this time, sycamore -- wind- dispersed.

4. A large cluster of sycamore figs

5. Return to What's the Cause? Sycamore Anthracnose

6. The shrubbery gave way to a patch of sycamore trees.

7. At Colonnade at Sycamore Highlands, we make the good life attainable

8. For a start, try leaves of lime, poplar, sycamore, holly, dandelion and groundsel.

9. A troubled mind drave me to walk abroad; Where, -- underneath the grove of sycamore

10. He could choose from locally grown timber, such as cypress, oak, cedar, sycamore, and olive.

11. Anthracnose diseases are common on ash (Fraxinus), maple (Acer), oak (Quercus), and sycamore (Platanus)

12. 9 For a start, try leaves of lime, poplar, sycamore, holly, dandelion and groundsel.

13. The larvae have been recorded feeding on the foliage of blueberries, hickories, oaks, sycamore, and witch-hazel.

14. Sycamore Coppices well and regenerates freely, growing rapidly in the first 25 years of its life

15. Chunks of oak, ash, alder, beech, sycamore and hazel lay here and there, awaiting their miracles.

16. Aetna, the insurer, will now provide students with free Abortifacients and contraceptives,” Sycamore Trust’s newsletter reported

17. Milk glazed figured Sycamore walls filled with an abundance of impressive windows graciously surround Chasseur’s light, modern, elegant interior.

18. Sycamore, oak (especially white oaks), maple, ash, walnut, and dogwood are especially vulnerable to Anthracnose, which may cause leaf …

19. He stood on one of the top milky branches of a sycamore, a nonchalant forty feet off the ground.

20. A tiny girl dressed in a ragged, colored kimono was busily gathering yellow sycamore leaves into a bouquet.

21. The Abbest in the city Simi Valley by the address 1844 Sycamore Dr, Simi Valley, CA 93065, United States

22. Bureaucratizing Values 45 learn the names of trees in his neighborhood, that when he walks to work it is good to be able to distinguish the sycamore maple from the sycamore. It helps one know better where one is going, and even why

23. In March 1775, land speculator and North Carolina judge Richard Henderson met with more than 1,200 Cherokees at Sycamore Shoals.

24. Bagworms will also feed on true cedars, pine, spruce, bald cypress, maple, boxelder, sycamore, willow, black locust, and oaks

25. Trees that are most commonly and severely affected by Anthracnose include ash, maple, white oak, sycamore, and walnut

26. However, red alder wood had a significantly higher fuel-value index than sycamore, owing to its lower ash content.

27. There were tall trees here and there on either side, oak and sycamore and ash and occasionally a sweet chestnut.

28. The roof had fallen in long ago, and an enormous sycamore had grown on the spot where the sacristy had once stood.

29. 28 Over the olive groves and the sycamore trees+ in the She·pheʹlah+ was Baʹal-haʹnan the Ge·deʹrite; over the oil supplies was Joʹash.

30. Conditions were perfect in spring 2013 for a severe outbreak of sycamore Anthracnose, caused by the fungus Apiognomonia veneta (say that three times!)

31. WE recently reported1 that a growth-inhibitory substance (‘dormin’) from sycamore leaves is identical with Abscisin II, an abscission-accelerating substance obtained from young cotton fruits.

32. 38), as in vine and sycamore, and in leaves with radiating vernation, where the ribs mark the foldings; or it is rolled upon itself, Convolute (fig

33. In the Shephelah, an area that includes the foothills between the central mountain range and the Mediterranean Coast, the sycamore fig (Ficus sycomorus) was also abundant.

34. A common name for our native sycamore is " Buttonwood tree," which refers to these 1-inch fruits that hang from stringy 3- to 6-inch stalks.

35. In the absence of these preferred hosts, Bagworm will eat the foliage of just about any tree: fir, spruce, pine, hemlock, sweetgum, sycamore, honey locust, and black locust.

36. Like other woods that exhibit the strongest figure in quartersawn pieces, (such as Sycamore), Beefwood has the most pronounced figure and displays the largest flecks when perfectly quartersawn; this is due to the wood’s large

37. 19-Year-Old And Her Cat Killed As Car Careens Off PCH A 19-year-old woman and her cat were killed Monday morning when their car flew off PCH onto Sycamore Cove Beach.

38. Balac: TWOT - 250: Phonetic Spelling: Parts of Speech: baw-las' Verb : Definition (Qal) to gather figs, tend sycamore trees ; King James Word Usage - Total: 1: gatherer 1: KJV Verse Count: Amos: 1: Total: 1: The Hebrew lexicon is Brown, Driver, Briggs, Gesenius Lexicon; this is keyed to the "Theological Word Book of the Old Testament." These

39. (noun) Of deciduous trees the sycamore, wych-elm, horse-chestnut, beech, lime, plane and poplar may be used, - the Abele or white poplar, Populus alba, being one of the most rapidgrowing of all trees, and, like other poplars, well suited for nursing other choicer subjects; while of evergreens, the holm oak, holly, laurel (both common and Portugal), and such

40. Anthracnose (Leaf Blight) is a general term for foliar diseases caused by numerous species of fungi and affects a broad range of trees including ash, dogwood, maple, beech, birch, elm, linden, oak, sycamore and willow.Visible symptoms of the disease vary with species and host but most commonly, infected leaves develop tan to reddish brown lesions that extend along the veins of the leaf.