a small American tree which produces timber used for fishing floats (Leitneria floridana, family Leitneriaceae).
a tree native to New Zealand (Entelea arborescens, family Tiliaceae).
Example sentencesExamples
In 2002, when fuel loads were similar to today's, 17 million hectares burned in Central Australia, including a major fire in the West Macs, destroying an old corkwood forest.
Two of my favourite indigenous trees for bonsai are the white stinkwood and the red stemmed corkwood or paperbark.
The top of the rise is marked by a twisted old corkwood tree.
The real problems are the corkwoods and the ironwoods.
At 30 points it is just 5 points bigger than the smallest champions on the Register - the northern bayberry and corkwood.
Definition of corkwood in US English:
corkwood
nounˈkôrkwo͝od
A shrub or tree which yields light porous timber.
塞子木;轻木,尤指
a similar tree native to New Zealand (Entelea arborescens, family Tiliaceae)
a small American tree that produces timber used for fishing floats (Leitneria floridana, family Leitneriaceae)
Example sentencesExamples
At 30 points it is just 5 points bigger than the smallest champions on the Register - the northern bayberry and corkwood.
In 2002, when fuel loads were similar to today's, 17 million hectares burned in Central Australia, including a major fire in the West Macs, destroying an old corkwood forest.
The top of the rise is marked by a twisted old corkwood tree.
Two of my favourite indigenous trees for bonsai are the white stinkwood and the red stemmed corkwood or paperbark.
The real problems are the corkwoods and the ironwoods.