| 释义 | 
		Definition of ponderosa in English: ponderosa(also ponderosa pine) noun ˌpɒndəˈrəʊzəˌpɒndəˈrəʊsəˌpɑndəˈroʊsə A tall, slender North American pine tree, planted for timber and as an ornamental. 西黄松,美国黄松 Pinus ponderosa, family Pinaceae Example sentencesExamples -  Among them were species like ponderosa and lodgepole pine, trees that proved so commercially valuable they contributed significantly to the building of the country.
 -  In California, 94,000 Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine will be planted an 350 acres of Tahoe National Forest near Nevada City.
 -  Eventually, dwarf mistletoe plants steal enough water, minerals, and nutrients to kill the ponderosa and lodgepole pines, Douglas-firs, western larches, and western hemlocks they attack.
 -  At first all we saw were woods dominated by ponderosa and sugar pines.
 -  The eagles tend to roost in huge ponderosas in northeast-facing canyons among the hills that dot Wyoming's mile-high prairies.
 -  He predicts 30 to 40 percent of the ponderosas and 80 percent of the piñons will fall victim to insects by next summer.
 -  When we're talking about disastrous forest fires in the West, usually we're talking about low-lying, dry forests of ponderosa pine and Douglas fir.
 -  The Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine planted in this area will help regenerate an ecosystem inhabited by wildlife, including bald eagles.
 -  The northern Idaho ground squirrel lives in dry, rocky meadows surrounded by forests of ponderosa pine or Douglas fir.
 -  The majestic ponderosa pine occupies the transition zone between mountain valleys and the cooler, damper spruce/fir zone.
 -  But ponderosas aren't the only trees in the western woods, and different forests require different solutions.
 -  The east side is dry ponderosa and lodgepole pine country.
 -  When a ponderosa pine on the hillside drops its needles every fall, Keskimaki leaves them in place as a winter mulch to protect plants from extreme cold, then removes them in the spring.
 -  The distribution of tree species will change, and fire-resistant ponderosas will likely survive where Douglas firs and white pines may not.
 -  A single seed was used for species with larger seeds (western white pine, ponderosa pine, loblolly pine, and Pacific silver fir).
 -  In ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, and Sitka spruce, dimpling sometimes occurs as numerous small, conical indentations of the plane of the growth ring.
 -  But he was unhappy about planting only Douglas-fir or ponderosa pine on a site, replacing the natural mixed species with a monoculture.
 -  The skyline is dotted with mountain ranges on whose slopes are dense forests of aspen, fir, spruce and ponderosas.
 -  Approximately one-third of the tract is timbered with ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, and Douglas fir; the rest is Camas prairie.
 -  There were hardwoods and ponderosas, as well as a dozen varieties of cactus, but no grasses or wildflowers.
 
 
 OriginLate 19th century: feminine of Latin ponderosus 'massive', used as a specific epithet in Pinus ponderosa. Rhymescomposer, discloser, dozer, exposer, Mendoza, mimosa, opposer, poser, proposer, proser, Rosa, Somoza, Spinoza    Definition of ponderosa in US English: ponderosa(also ponderosa pine) nounˌpändəˈrōsəˌpɑndəˈroʊsə A tall slender pine tree, the most widespread conifer of western North America, planted for timber and as an ornamental. 西黄松,美国黄松 Pinus ponderosa, family Pinaceae Example sentencesExamples -  Eventually, dwarf mistletoe plants steal enough water, minerals, and nutrients to kill the ponderosa and lodgepole pines, Douglas-firs, western larches, and western hemlocks they attack.
 -  In California, 94,000 Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine will be planted an 350 acres of Tahoe National Forest near Nevada City.
 -  Approximately one-third of the tract is timbered with ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, and Douglas fir; the rest is Camas prairie.
 -  The east side is dry ponderosa and lodgepole pine country.
 -  There were hardwoods and ponderosas, as well as a dozen varieties of cactus, but no grasses or wildflowers.
 -  The majestic ponderosa pine occupies the transition zone between mountain valleys and the cooler, damper spruce/fir zone.
 -  When we're talking about disastrous forest fires in the West, usually we're talking about low-lying, dry forests of ponderosa pine and Douglas fir.
 -  The Douglas-fir, ponderosa pine, and sugar pine planted in this area will help regenerate an ecosystem inhabited by wildlife, including bald eagles.
 -  The distribution of tree species will change, and fire-resistant ponderosas will likely survive where Douglas firs and white pines may not.
 -  A single seed was used for species with larger seeds (western white pine, ponderosa pine, loblolly pine, and Pacific silver fir).
 -  At first all we saw were woods dominated by ponderosa and sugar pines.
 -  He predicts 30 to 40 percent of the ponderosas and 80 percent of the piñons will fall victim to insects by next summer.
 -  But ponderosas aren't the only trees in the western woods, and different forests require different solutions.
 -  Among them were species like ponderosa and lodgepole pine, trees that proved so commercially valuable they contributed significantly to the building of the country.
 -  The northern Idaho ground squirrel lives in dry, rocky meadows surrounded by forests of ponderosa pine or Douglas fir.
 -  When a ponderosa pine on the hillside drops its needles every fall, Keskimaki leaves them in place as a winter mulch to protect plants from extreme cold, then removes them in the spring.
 -  The eagles tend to roost in huge ponderosas in northeast-facing canyons among the hills that dot Wyoming's mile-high prairies.
 -  In ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, and Sitka spruce, dimpling sometimes occurs as numerous small, conical indentations of the plane of the growth ring.
 -  The skyline is dotted with mountain ranges on whose slopes are dense forests of aspen, fir, spruce and ponderosas.
 -  But he was unhappy about planting only Douglas-fir or ponderosa pine on a site, replacing the natural mixed species with a monoculture.
 
 
 OriginLate 19th century: feminine of Latin ponderosus ‘massive’, used as a specific epithet in Pinus ponderosa.     |