CAROB TREE vs HONEY LOCUST: NOUN
- Evergreen Mediterranean tree with edible pods; the biblical carob
- A North American deciduous tree (Gleditsia triacanthos) having fragrant flowers and hard red wood.
- An ornamental North American tree, Gleditschia triacanthos.
- Any of several trees of the genus Gleditsia of the pea family, especially G. triacanthos of eastern North America, which has pinnately compound leaves, large twisted pods with a sweet pulp, and usually thorns on the trunk and branches.
- Tall usually spiny North American tree having small greenish-white flowers in drooping racemes followed by long twisting seed pods; yields very hard durable reddish-brown wood; introduced to temperate Old World
CAROB TREE vs HONEY LOCUST: OTHER WORD TYPES
- The biblical carob
- Introduced to temperate Old World
- Yields very hard durable reddish-brown wood
CAROB TREE vs HONEY LOCUST: RELATED WORDS
- Pandanus, Tamarind tree, Hackberries, Holm oak, Breadfruit tree, Mulberry tree, Casuarinas, Linden tree, Honey locust, Coniferous tree, Camphor tree, Ceratonia siliqua, Carob bean tree, Algarroba, Carob
- Liquidambar, Photinia, Ligustrum, Bur oak, Flowering quince, Flowering crab, Catalpa, Sword fern, Coniferous tree, Wax myrtle, Deciduous holly, Bridal wreath, Siberian elm, Scotch pine, Gleditsia triacanthos
CAROB TREE vs HONEY LOCUST: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Ocotillo, Yaupon, Podocarpus, Avocado tree, Pandanus, Tamarind tree, Hackberries, Holm oak, Breadfruit tree, Casuarinas, Linden tree, Honey locust, Coniferous tree, Camphor tree, Carob
- Hackberry, Serviceberry, Red osier dogwood, Liquidambar, Photinia, Ligustrum, Flowering quince, Catalpa, Sword fern, Coniferous tree, Wax myrtle, Deciduous holly, Bridal wreath, Siberian elm, Scotch pine
CAROB TREE vs HONEY LOCUST: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The carob tree, has a fruit that looks like a dark brown pea pod, which carries pulp and seeds.
- Once Honi was walking along the road when he saw a man planting a carob tree.
- It's served with butter infused pecans and algarrobina, an extract from the black carob tree.
- The most common street tree is the Norway maple (24.3 percent) followed by the honey locust (9.3 percent).
- The list is extensive, and environmentally damaging ones include pasture plants such as glycene, cotton bush, honey locust and most of the grasses.
- Wood species cut into slabs are black walnut, ash, cherry, hickory, american elm, honey locust and more.
- The honey locust, tree of heaven, and plants deskside on my windowsill in New York.
- Wide Selection of Honey Locust Live Edge Slabs Free Freight Shipping included with every purchase.
- Some trees generally resistant to deer include spruce, pines, honey locust, river birch, and buckeyes.
- Tree species include pine, maple, honey locust, linden, ash, oak, horse chestnut, and redbud.