| 释义 | 
		Definition of basswood in English: basswoodnounˈbaswʊdˈbæswʊd A North American lime tree with large leaves, commonly planted along streets in the US. 美洲椴 Tilia americana, family Tiliaceae Example sentencesExamples -  The park is known for its magnificent hardwood forest of sugar maple, American elm, basswood, and aspen.
 -  Except for a few looming hemlocks, the forest is mostly hardwoods, and the light streams through the thinning tops of the taller oaks and basswoods.
 -  Sugar maples commonly share the forest with ironwood, beech, basswood, white ash, black cherry, yellow birch, white pine, and red oak.
 -  Walnut trees can also grow in small groups or as scattered specimens mixed with American elm, hackberry, boxelder, sugar maple, green and white ash, basswood, red oak, and hickory.
 -  In contrast, a bee-pollinated basswood can flower a month or more after the leaf buds have opened, when bee populations peak in late summer.
 
 
 OriginLate 17th century: from bass3 + wood.    Definition of basswood in US English: basswoodnounˈbæswʊdˈbaswo͝od A North American linden tree, commonly planted along streets. 美洲椴 Genus Tilia, family Tiliaceae: several species, in particular the large-leaved T. americana(also called American linden) of the northern US and Canada Example sentencesExamples -  The park is known for its magnificent hardwood forest of sugar maple, American elm, basswood, and aspen.
 -  Walnut trees can also grow in small groups or as scattered specimens mixed with American elm, hackberry, boxelder, sugar maple, green and white ash, basswood, red oak, and hickory.
 -  Sugar maples commonly share the forest with ironwood, beech, basswood, white ash, black cherry, yellow birch, white pine, and red oak.
 -  In contrast, a bee-pollinated basswood can flower a month or more after the leaf buds have opened, when bee populations peak in late summer.
 -  Except for a few looming hemlocks, the forest is mostly hardwoods, and the light streams through the thinning tops of the taller oaks and basswoods.
 
 
 OriginLate 17th century: from bass + wood.     |