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blackthorn
/ ˈblækˌθɔːn /
noun
- Also calledsloe a thorny Eurasian rosaceous shrub, Prunus spinosa , with black twigs, white flowers, and small sour plumlike fruits
- a walking stick made from its wood
Word History and Origins
Origin of blackthorn1
Example Sentences
There is little diversity on the majority of the 146-acre land, with nearly all fields grazed by sheep, but there are some wetter areas and some hedgerows of blackthorn, hawthorn, hazel, oak, gorse and holly.
Sloe gin’s origins go back to the hedgerows of blackthorn bushes that served as fences all across England when common farmland was divvied up in the 17th century.
And this is intriguing, because magpies typically construct their roofs out of hawthorn, blackthorn, and rose stems.
This month they have mysteriously appeared among their favourite habitat: hawthorn and blackthorn trees on the edge of London, where I and other naturalists watched them flitting between hedgerows.
If you can get your hands on some blackthorn berries from your local market, then you can make a bottle of Sloe Gin.
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