A large tree bearing edible fruit, Ficus sycomorus, allied to the common fig and found in Egypt and Syria; also called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry; the Biblical sycomore
Any of several North American plane trees, of the genus Platanus, especially Platanus occidentalis (American sycamore)
A sycamore or a sycamore tree is a tree that has yellow flowers and large leaves with five points. Sycamore is the wood of this tree. The furniture is made of sycamore, beech and leather. Any of several distinct trees called by the same name though in different genera and families. In the U.S. the term refers to the American plane tree or buttonwood (Platanus occidentalis), a hardy street tree. The sycamore maple, or mock plane (Acer pseudoplatanus), is sometimes also called simply sycamore. The biblical sycamore, actually the sycamore fig (Ficus sycomorus), was used by the ancient Egyptians to make mummy cases
thick-branched wide-spreading tree of Africa and adjacent southwestern Asia often buttressed with branches rising from near the ground; produces cluster of edible but inferior figs on short leafless twigs; the Biblical sycamore
{i} buttonwood, any of a number of North American deciduous trees having rounded fruits and a flaky outer bark; Eurasian deciduous maple tree; fig tree native to Africa and southwest Asia
any of several trees of the genus Platanus having thin pale bark that scales off in small plates and lobed leaves and ball-shaped heads of fruits