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walnut
[wawl-nuht, -nuht]
noun
the edible nut of trees of the genus Juglans, of the North Temperate Zone.
the tree itself.
the wood of such a tree.
Northeastern U.S., the hickory nut.
any of various fruits or trees resembling the walnut.
a somewhat reddish shade of brown, as that of the heartwood of the black walnut tree.
walnut
/ ˈwɔːlˌnʌt /
noun
any juglandaceous deciduous tree of the genus Juglans, of America, SE Europe, and Asia, esp J. regia, which is native to W Asia but introduced elsewhere. They have aromatic leaves and flowers in catkins and are grown for their edible nuts and for their wood
the nut of any of these trees, having a wrinkled two-lobed seed and a hard wrinkled shell
the wood of any of these trees, used in making furniture, panelling, etc
a light yellowish-brown colour
adjective
made from the wood of a walnut tree
a walnut table
of the colour walnut
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of walnut1
Example Sentences
The room itself was neatly ordered with walnut and cement accents.
"I liked fishing there, I had a small plot of land, my grapes and my walnut tree," he says.
The air smells faintly of aged walnut wood, but there is no machinery in sight.
Walnut trees and alfalfa are two of the main crops in Chihuahua's Rio Conchos Valley, both of which require a lot of watering – walnut trees need on average 250 litres a day.
L.A. was a farm town, with vineyards in what is now downtown, and walnut, orange and lemon groves radiating outward, along with fields of tomatoes, celery, cauliflower, lettuce and lima beans.
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