black gum
English
editAlternative forms
edit- (tree): blackgum
Noun
editblack gum (plural black gums)
- A tree native to eastern North America, Nyssa sylvatica.
- Synonyms: black tupelo, pepperidge, sour gum
- 1958, William O. Steele, The Perilous Road, published 2004, page 2:
- Sweet gums and black gums and sourwoods made the woods bright now when oaks and hickories had just begun to look dull and faded.
- 2006, Richard M. Donovan, Paddling the Wild Neches[1], page 77:
- Old settlers learned from the bees and built their own beehives with two-foot sections sawn from the trunks of hollow black gums.
- 2011, John S. Burk, The Wildlife of New England: A Viewer's Guide[2], page 175:
- The sanctuary's other habitats include forests of black cherry, red cedar, black locust, beech, and oak, with red maples and black gums in wet areas.
- Certain eucalyptus trees of Australia
- Eucalyptus aggregata, of south eastern Australia
- Eucalyptus ovata, of south eastern Australia
- Synonyms: blue-leaf sally, large-flower swamp gum, Marrawah gum, swamp gum, white gum
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see black, gum.
- 2009, Tricia Telep, The Eternal Kiss, 2010, Large Print Edition, page 67,
- He grinned, displaying crooked teeth and black gums. Yikes.
- 2009, Tricia Telep, The Eternal Kiss, 2010, Large Print Edition, page 67,
Translations
editReferences
edit- black gum on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Nyssa sylvatica on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
- Nyssa sylvatica on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons