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box elder
noun
- a North American maple, Acer negundo, having light gray-brown bark, pinnate, coarsely toothed leaves, and dry, winged fruit, cultivated as a shade tree, and yielding a light, soft wood used in making furniture, woodenware, etc.
box elder
noun
- a medium-sized fast-growing widely cultivated North American maple, Acer negundo , which has compound leaves with lobed leaflets Also calledash-leaved maple
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Word History and Origins
Origin of box elder1
An Americanism dating back to 1780–90
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Example Sentences
Invasive shothole borers have sickened at least 65 varieties of SoCal urban trees — such as box elders, maples, willows, sycamores, oaks and cottonwoods — by infesting them with their primary food source, fusarium fungus.
From Los Angeles Times
The canyon is filled with box elders that had not yet leafed out, and above us sandstone cliffs soared like skyscrapers.
From Los Angeles Times
It looks similar to the box elder bug that’s commonly found in Colorado.
From Washington Times
On his list: Using a chainsaw to make a backyard sculpture of a bodybuilder out of the trunk of a dead box elder tree.
From Washington Times
About to leave, I stood outside chatting with Sidnee while she squashed a couple of box elder bugs.
From Washington Times
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