The CroswodSolver.com system found 25 answers for white poplar tree crossword clue. Our system collect crossword clues from most populer crossword, cryptic puzzle, quick/small crossword that found in Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph, Daily Express, Daily Mirror, Herald-Sun, The Courier-Mail, Dominion Post and many others popular newspaper. Enter the answer length or the answer pattern to get better results.
Rate | Answer | Clue |
ABELE | White poplar tree | |
POPLAR | The timber of the tulip tree; -- called also white poplar. | |
PAGODA | Sophora japonica, is a Chinese tree with ornamental white flowers | |
GALACTIN | A white waxy substance found in the sap of the South American cow tree (Galactodendron). | |
MEMBRANACEOUS | Thin and rather soft or pliable, as the leaves of the rose, peach tree, and aspen poplar. | |
TACAMAHACA | Any tree yielding tacamahac resin, especially, in North America, the balsam poplar, or balm of Gilead (Populus balsamifera). | |
WHITEBEAM | The common beam tree of England (Pyrus Aria); -- so called from the white, woolly under surface of the leaves. | |
GUELDERROSE' | A cultivated variety of a species of Viburnum (V. Opulus), bearing large bunches of white flowers; -- called also snowball tree. | |
SEQUOIENE | A hydrocarbon (C13H10) obtained in white fluorescent crystals, in the distillation products of the needles of the California "big tree" (Sequoia gigantea). | |
LILLY-PILLY | An Australian myrtaceous tree (Eugenia Smithii), having smooth ovate leaves, and panicles of small white flowers. The wood is hard and fine-grained. | |
POPULIN | A glycoside, related to salicin, found in the bark of certain species of the poplar (Populus), and extracted as a sweet white crystalline substance. | |
SALICIN | A glucoside found in the bark and leaves of several species of willow (Salix) and poplar, and extracted as a bitter white crystalline substance. | |
SHEEPBERRY | The edible fruit of a small North American tree of the genus Viburnum (V. Lentago), having white flowers in flat cymes; also, the tree itself. Called also nannyberry. | |
SANDARAC | A white or yellow resin obtained from a Barbary tree (Callitris quadrivalvis or Thuya articulata), and pulverized for pounce; -- probably so called from a resemblance to the mineral. | |
COTTONWOOD | An American tree of the genus Populus or poplar, having the seeds covered with abundant cottonlike hairs; esp., the P. monilifera and P. angustifolia of the Western United States. | |
SORBIN | An unfermentable sugar, isomeric with glucose, found in the ripe berries of the rowan tree, or sorb, and extracted as a sweet white crystalline substance; -- called also mountain-ash sugar. | |
BUTTERNUT | An American tree (Juglans cinerea) of the Walnut family, and its edible fruit; -- so called from the oil contained in the latter. Sometimes called oil nut and white walnut. | |
LOCUST TREE | ...(R. Pseudacacia), producing large slender racemes of white, fragrant, papilionaceous flowers, and often cultivated as an ornamental tree. In ... | |
SORBIC | ...or sorb; specifically, designating an acid, C/H/CO/H, of the acetylene series, found in the unripe berries of this tree, and extracted as a whit... | |
SPRUCE | Any coniferous tree of the genus Picea, as the Norway spruce (P. excelsa), and the white and black spruces of America (P. alba and P. nigra), b... | |
WRIGHTINE | ...an apocynaceous tree (Wrightia antidysenterica), and extracted as a bitter white crystalline substance. It was formerly used as a remedy for ... | |
MASTIC | A resin exuding from the mastic tree, and obtained by incision. The best is in yellowish white, semitransparent tears, of a faint smell, and is... | |
VICEROY | ...hia, / Limenitis, archippus). Its wings are orange-red, with black lines along the nervures and a row of white spots along the outer margins. Th... | |
CANDLEBERRY TREE | ...yrtle), common in North America, the little nuts of which are covered with a greenish white wax, which was formerly, used for hardening candles;... | |
ELM | ...ch used as a shade tree, particularly in America. The English elm is Ulmus campestris; the common American or white elm is U. Americana; the ... |