sert kereste

listen to the pronunciation of sert kereste
Turkish - English
hardwood
As the preceding but limited to those that are commercial timbers, and are at least average in hardness

Ash, hickory and oak are some of the most prominent domestic hardwoods.

the wood of broad-leaved dicotyledonous trees (as distinguished from the wood of conifers) made of the hard-to-cut wood of a broad-leaved tree, as e
Hardwood is wood such as oak, teak, and mahogany, which is very strong and hard. hardwood floors. softwood. strong heavy wood from trees such as oak, used for making furniture softwood. Timber obtained from broad-leaved, flower-bearing trees. Hardwood trees are deciduous trees, except in the warmest regions. The term, a classification of material, applied originally to such hard European woods as beech and oak but also includes some of the softest of woods. Included in the category are ebony, various mahoganies (see mahogany family), maple, teak, and American black walnut
wood from broad-leaved species of trees not necessarily hard or dense
A deciduous or broad-leaf tree; also applies to the wood from such species (see: SOFTWOOD)
Trees and shrubs with broad-leaves (not needles or scales) that drop in the fall are called "hardwoods" Hardwood trees can also be called "broad-leafed" trees or "deciduous" trees [To return to previous page, click your browser's BACK button then scroll through the page to your last location]
The tree or tree species that yields the preceding
Wood derived from trees such as oak, beech, maple, mahogany, and walnut
A term used to describe broadleaf, usually deciduous, trees such as oaks, maples, ashes, elms, etc It does not necessarily refer to the hardness of the wood
timber from broad-leaved, flowering trees (the botanical group Angiospermae), irrespective of physical hardness; includes eucalypts, wattles and most rainforest species
n A general name given to wood of a deciduous tree
A term describing broadleaf trees, usually deciduous, such as oaks, maples and ashes
A joint term for the commercial timbers, without distinguishing which
made of the hard-to-cut wood of a broad-leaved tree, as e g oak; "hardwood floors"
One of the botanical groups of trees that has broad leaves in contrast to the needle-like leaves of the conifers or softwoods; hardwoods are deciduous (they shed their leaves in the fall or at the end of each growing season)
Term used to describe all broadleaved trees These tree species are deciduous, retaining their leaves only one growing season Despite the term, some "hardwoods" such as the aspens, have wood that is relatively soft
A term describing broadleaf, usually deciduous, trees such as oak, maples, ashes, elms, etc The term does not necessarily to the hardness of the wood Some hardwoods are evergreens
The wood from any dicotyledonous tree, without regard to its hardness
A broad-leaved flowering tree, usually deciduous, as distinguished from a conifer Trees belonging to the botanical group of angiosperms; trees such as oaks, maples, ashes, elms It does not necessarily refer to the hardness of the wood
sert kereste
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