English Dictionary

SYCAMORE

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 Dictionary entry overview: What does sycamore mean? 

SYCAMORE (noun)
  The noun SYCAMORE has 4 senses:

1. variably colored and sometimes variegated hard tough elastic wood of a sycamore treeplay

2. any of several trees of the genus Platanus having thin pale bark that scales off in small plates and lobed leaves and ball-shaped heads of fruitsplay

3. Eurasian maple tree with pale grey bark that peels in flakes like that of a sycamore tree; leaves with five ovate lobes yellow in autumnplay

4. thick-branched wide-spreading tree of Africa and adjacent southwestern Asia often buttressed with branches rising from near the ground; produces cluster of edible but inferior figs on short leafless twigs; the biblical sycamoreplay

  Familiarity information: SYCAMORE used as a noun is uncommon.


 Dictionary entry details 


SYCAMORE (noun)


Sense 1

Meaning:

Variably colored and sometimes variegated hard tough elastic wood of a sycamore tree

Classified under:

Nouns denoting plants

Synonyms:

lacewood; sycamore

Hypernyms ("sycamore" is a kind of...):

wood (the hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees)

Holonyms ("sycamore" is a substance of...):

plane tree; platan; sycamore (any of several trees of the genus Platanus having thin pale bark that scales off in small plates and lobed leaves and ball-shaped heads of fruits)


Sense 2

Meaning:

Any of several trees of the genus Platanus having thin pale bark that scales off in small plates and lobed leaves and ball-shaped heads of fruits

Classified under:

Nouns denoting plants

Synonyms:

plane tree; platan; sycamore

Hypernyms ("sycamore" is a kind of...):

tree (a tall perennial woody plant having a main trunk and branches forming a distinct elevated crown; includes both gymnosperms and angiosperms)

Meronyms (substance of "sycamore"):

lacewood; sycamore (variably colored and sometimes variegated hard tough elastic wood of a sycamore tree)

Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "sycamore"):

London plane; Platanus acerifolia (very large fast-growing tree much planted as a street tree)

American plane; American sycamore; buttonwood; Platanus occidentalis (very large spreading plane tree of eastern and central North America to Mexico)

oriental plane; Platanus orientalis (large tree of southeastern Europe to Asia Minor)

California sycamore; Platanus racemosa (tall tree of Baja California having deciduous bark and large alternate palmately lobed leaves and ball-shaped clusters of flowers)

Arizona sycamore; Platanus wrightii (medium-sized tree of Arizona and adjacent regions having deeply lobed leaves and collective fruits in groups of 3 to 5)

Holonyms ("sycamore" is a member of...):

genus Platanus; Platanus (genus of large monoecious mostly deciduous trees: London plane; sycamore)


Sense 3

Meaning:

Eurasian maple tree with pale grey bark that peels in flakes like that of a sycamore tree; leaves with five ovate lobes yellow in autumn

Classified under:

Nouns denoting plants

Synonyms:

Acer pseudoplatanus; great maple; scottish maple; sycamore

Hypernyms ("sycamore" is a kind of...):

maple (any of numerous trees or shrubs of the genus Acer bearing winged seeds in pairs; north temperate zone)


Sense 4

Meaning:

Thick-branched wide-spreading tree of Africa and adjacent southwestern Asia often buttressed with branches rising from near the ground; produces cluster of edible but inferior figs on short leafless twigs; the biblical sycamore

Classified under:

Nouns denoting plants

Synonyms:

Ficus sycomorus; mulberry fig; sycamore; sycamore fig

Hypernyms ("sycamore" is a kind of...):

fig tree (any moraceous tree of the tropical genus Ficus; produces a closed pear-shaped receptacle that becomes fleshy and edible when mature)

Holonyms ("sycamore" is a member of...):

Ficus; genus Ficus (large genus of tropical trees or shrubs or climbers including fig trees)


 Context examples 


Have Pommers ready at mid-day with my sycamore lance, and place my harness on the sumpter mule.

(The White Company, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)



 Learn English with... Proverbs 
"Making a rod for your own back." (English proverb)

"«He who teaches himself hath a fool for a teacher», but he who does not teach himself has no teachers at all." (Christopher Berkeley)

"If you speak the word it shall own you, and if you don't you shall own it." (Arabic proverb)

"Hunger drives the wolf from its den." (Corsican proverb)



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