C A tree
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 18 answers to crossword clue "C A tree"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
EBOEC. A. tree
AMATEC.A. timber tree
EBOEOil-yielding tree of C.A.
chestnutsA related tree (C. mollissima) native to China and Korea, cultivated elsewhere for its edible nut. The flowers have a putrid odor
chestnutA related tree (C. mollissima) native to China and Korea, cultivated elsewhere for its edible nut. The flowers have a putrid odor
acerolathe cherrylike fruit of a small tree, Malpighia glabra, of the West Indies and adjacent areas, having a high concentration of vitamin C
acerolasthe cherrylike fruit of a small tree, Malpighia glabra, of the West Indies and adjacent areas, having a high concentration of vitamin C
hornbeamany North American shrub or tree belonging to the genus Carpinus, of the birch family, yielding a hard, heavy wood, as C. caroliniana(American hornbeam)
hornbeamsany North American shrub or tree belonging to the genus Carpinus, of the birch family, yielding a hard, heavy wood, as C. caroliniana(American hornbeam)
chestnutA related tree (C. dentata), which succumbed to a fungus bark disease in the early 1900s. Once prolific in the eastern US, very few large specimens survived
chestnutsA related tree (C. dentata), which succumbed to a fungus bark disease in the early 1900s. Once prolific in the eastern US, very few large specimens survived
EBOEC. American tree
PALMETTOS.C. state tree
TUNOC. American gum tree
EBOTree of C. America
SECONDWhere does N.C. rank among U.S. states in Christmas tree production?
colugoeither of two lemurlike mammals, Cynocephalus variegatus, of southeastern Asia and the East Indies, or C. volans, of the Philippines, having broad folds of skin on both sides of the body to aid in gliding from tree to tree: now rare
colugoseither of two lemurlike mammals, Cynocephalus variegatus, of southeastern Asia and the East Indies, or C. volans, of the Philippines, having broad folds of skin on both sides of the body to aid in gliding from tree to tree: now rare