- A hard reddish brown wood
- A hardwood used in furniture
- A hog got into many a timber
- Dark wood
- Hard wood
- Reddish furniture wood
- Reddish-brown wood
- A durable wood
- A hardwood
- A type of wood
- Acorn bearer
- Acorn tree
- Cook a young fish
- Deciduous tree
- China is supplied with this popular pattern
- Cricket bat wood
- Tree with pliant branches
- Type of tree
- Type of wood used in cricket bats
- Any tree or shrub of the genus Salix, including many
species, most of which are characterized often used as an emblem of
sorrow, desolation, or desertion. "A wreath of willow to show my
forsaken plight." Sir W. Scott. Hence, a lover forsaken by, or having
lost, the person beloved, is said to wear the willow.
- A machine in which cotton or wool is opened and cleansed by
the action of long spikes projecting from a drum which revolves within
a box studded with similar spikes; -- probably so called from having
been originally a cylindrical cage made of willow rods, though some
derive the term from winnow, as denoting the winnowing, or cleansing,
action of the machine. Called also willy, twilly, twilly devil, and
devil.
- Building piece
- Obstruct
- Pulley system, ... and tackle
- Shut out
- Ward off
- A piece of wood more or less bulky; a solid mass of wood,
stone, etc., usually with one or more plane, or approximately plane,
faces; as, a block on which a butcher chops his meat; a block by which
to mount a horse; children's playing blocks, etc.
- The solid piece of wood on which condemned persons lay
their necks when they are beheaded.
- Large ship with oars
- Ship’s kitchen
- A vessel propelled by oars, whether having masts and sails
or not
- A large vessel for war and national purposes; -- common in
the Middle Ages, and down to the 17th century.
- A name given by analogy to the Greek, Roman, and other
ancient vessels propelled by oars.
- A light, open boat used on the Thames by customhouse
officers, press gangs, and also for pleasure.
- One of the small boats carried by a man-of-war.
- Desk
- Movable household goods
- Table, chairs, etc
- That with which anything is furnished or supplied;
supplies; outfit; equipment.
- Articles used for convenience or decoration in a
house or apartment, as tables, chairs, bedsteads, sofas, carpets,
curtains, pictures, vases, etc.
- The necessary appendages to anything, as to a
machine, a carriage, a ship, etc.
- The masts and rigging of a ship.
- The technical name of methyl alcohol or wood spirit; also,
by extension, the class name of any of the series of alcohols of the
methane series of which methol proper is the type. See Methyl alcohol,
under Methyl.