| 释义 | 
		Definition of sumac in English: sumac(also sumach) nounˈʃuːmakˈs(j)uːmak 1A shrub or small tree with compound leaves, reddish hairy fruits in conical clusters, and bright autumn colours. 漆树 Genera Rhus and Cotinus, family Anacardiaceae: several species, including the Mediterranean R. coriaria and the North American staghorn sumac (R. typhina), often grown as an ornamental Example sentencesExamples -  In late summer, we cleared the 2-and 3-inch-diameter sumacs that had invaded the old garden.
 -  Oak trees provide acorns, dogwoods and sumac provide red berries through the fall and winter and serviceberry bears edible berries in late spring or early summer.
 -  If the vision is clouded, the result is not what we intend; the apple tree is a poison sumac.
 -  In the northeastern foothills, on relatively dry slopes, bur oak dominates above an understory of hop hornbeam, smooth sumac, coralberry, and poison ivy.
 -  In October, after the growing season, I had a female sumach tree cut down to ground level.
 -  Among the thousands of species he planted on LaGuardia Place are red and white oak, cedar, elm, birch, sassafras, dogwood, sumac, Virginia creeper and goldenrod.
 -  Our biggest loss this year has been the sumach tree which grew outside the dining room window.
 -  It only takes one case of poison ivy, oak or sumac to convince most people to stay away from these skin-irritating plants.
 -  She left the road again and ran until she found another sheltered hollow in the trees and sumac, where she lay down and waited.
 -  Other locally common tannin-rich plants include blackberry, raspberry, rose, lady's mantle, agrimony, meadowsweet, and strawberry (all members of the rose family), geraniums, purple loosestrife, and sumacs.
 -  Commonly encountered shrubs barberry and Oregon graperoot (both Berberis species), sumacs, rose, blackberry, raspberry, myrtle, alders and elders.
 -  Irritated summer skin is usually caused by clogged sweat ducts, a condition called prickly heat or miliaria, or by exposure to poison ivy, oak or sumac.
 -  And you can get even better protection by avoiding poison ivy all together, as well as its cousins poison sumac and poison oak.
 -  We also have a staghorn sumac tree and pussy willows.
 -  The most common forms included beech-like trees, poplars, willows, cattails, sumac, soapberry, and conifers such as pines, sequoias, and false cypress.
 -  If a child touches poison ivy, poison oak or a sumac plant, causing an itchy rash with pin-size clear blisters, give him a thorough bath to remove the oily resin that caused the reaction.
 -  You will remember that we accidentally killed the original tree, a sumach, by suffocating the roots with a mixture of rotting logs and sunflower husks.
 -  The answer lies in the tremendous diversity of deciduous trees: maples, oaks, sumacs and beech each impart their own range of colours to the overall palette.
 -  Taking the trails at a healthy pace, I rounded the corner on a crop of autumn red sumac when two deer bounded out of their shelter beside me, tufts of snow flying in their wake.
 -  The procedure for making true lacquer required the resin secreted by the Rhus vemicifera, a sumac tree that was not indigenous to the West and was unknown in Europe until the beginning of the eighteenth century.
 
 - 1.1 The fruits of the Mediterranean sumac, used as a spice, especially in Middle Eastern cuisine.
地中海漆树果实 Example sentencesExamples -  The kabob koubideh is composed of ground beef and a considerable amount of minced onion, along with salt, black pepper, turmeric and sumac, and perhaps a hint of lime or lemon juice.
 -  These Middle Eastern breads are topped with a paste of dried thyme and sumac, but you could use dried chilli flakes, chopped garlic, nigella seeds, or crushed cumin and coriander seeds.
 -  The spice sumac is made from the dried, powdered berries.
 -  Examples are glossy black chokecherry, Siberian and ‘red splendor’ crabapple, snowberry, bittersweet, sumacs, American highbush cranberry, eastern and European wahoo, Virginia creeper and Chinaberry.
 -  With a generous shaking of deep red, citrusy sumac spice, it had a warm and rich taste.
 
  
 
 OriginMiddle English (denoting the dried and ground leaves of R. coriaria used in tanning and dyeing): from Old French sumac or medieval Latin sumac(h), from Arabic summāq.    Definition of sumac in US English: sumac(also sumach) noun A shrub or small tree of the cashew family, with compound leaves, fruits in conical clusters, and bright autumn colors. 漆树 Genera Rhus and Cotinus, family Anacardiaceae: several species, including the North American staghorn sumac (R. typhina), with densely clustered reddish hairy fruits, and poison sumac (R. vernix), with loosely clustered greenish-white fruits. Touching any part of the poison sumac can cause severe dermatitis Example sentencesExamples -  We also have a staghorn sumac tree and pussy willows.
 -  Among the thousands of species he planted on LaGuardia Place are red and white oak, cedar, elm, birch, sassafras, dogwood, sumac, Virginia creeper and goldenrod.
 -  Irritated summer skin is usually caused by clogged sweat ducts, a condition called prickly heat or miliaria, or by exposure to poison ivy, oak or sumac.
 -  You will remember that we accidentally killed the original tree, a sumach, by suffocating the roots with a mixture of rotting logs and sunflower husks.
 -  Oak trees provide acorns, dogwoods and sumac provide red berries through the fall and winter and serviceberry bears edible berries in late spring or early summer.
 -  Commonly encountered shrubs barberry and Oregon graperoot (both Berberis species), sumacs, rose, blackberry, raspberry, myrtle, alders and elders.
 -  The procedure for making true lacquer required the resin secreted by the Rhus vemicifera, a sumac tree that was not indigenous to the West and was unknown in Europe until the beginning of the eighteenth century.
 -  The answer lies in the tremendous diversity of deciduous trees: maples, oaks, sumacs and beech each impart their own range of colours to the overall palette.
 -  And you can get even better protection by avoiding poison ivy all together, as well as its cousins poison sumac and poison oak.
 -  Taking the trails at a healthy pace, I rounded the corner on a crop of autumn red sumac when two deer bounded out of their shelter beside me, tufts of snow flying in their wake.
 -  In the northeastern foothills, on relatively dry slopes, bur oak dominates above an understory of hop hornbeam, smooth sumac, coralberry, and poison ivy.
 -  Other locally common tannin-rich plants include blackberry, raspberry, rose, lady's mantle, agrimony, meadowsweet, and strawberry (all members of the rose family), geraniums, purple loosestrife, and sumacs.
 -  It only takes one case of poison ivy, oak or sumac to convince most people to stay away from these skin-irritating plants.
 -  Our biggest loss this year has been the sumach tree which grew outside the dining room window.
 -  In late summer, we cleared the 2-and 3-inch-diameter sumacs that had invaded the old garden.
 -  She left the road again and ran until she found another sheltered hollow in the trees and sumac, where she lay down and waited.
 -  If a child touches poison ivy, poison oak or a sumac plant, causing an itchy rash with pin-size clear blisters, give him a thorough bath to remove the oily resin that caused the reaction.
 -  The most common forms included beech-like trees, poplars, willows, cattails, sumac, soapberry, and conifers such as pines, sequoias, and false cypress.
 -  If the vision is clouded, the result is not what we intend; the apple tree is a poison sumac.
 -  In October, after the growing season, I had a female sumach tree cut down to ground level.
 
 
 OriginMiddle English (denoting the dried and ground leaves of R. coriaria used in tanning and dyeing): from Old French sumac or medieval Latin sumac(h), from Arabic summāq.     |