#cypress__cypres wood of any of various cypress trees especially of the genus Cupressus
supertype: wood the hard fibrous lignified substance under the bark of trees
substance of: cypress_tree
subtype: cypress_pine__cypresspine any of several evergreen trees or shrubs of Australia and northern New Caledonia
subtype: Port_Jackson_pine__Callitris_cupressiformis Australian cypress pine having globular cones
subtype: black_cypress_pine__blackcypresspine__red_cypress_pine__redcypresspine__Callitris_endlicheri__Callitris_calcarata Australian tree with small flattened scales as leaves and numerous dark brown seed; valued for its timber and resin
subtype: white_cypress_pine__whitecypresspine__Callitris_glaucophylla__Callitris_glauca small tree or shrub of southern Australia
subtype: stringybark_pine__stringybarkpine__Callitris_parlatorei Australian cypress pine with fibrous inner bark
subtype: juniper coniferous shrub or small tree with berrylike cones
subtype: pencil_cedar_tree__pencil_cedar any of several junipers with wood suitable for making pencils
subtype: eastern_red_cedar__easternredcedar__red_cedar__red_juniper__redjuniper__Juniperus_virginiana small juniper found east of Rocky Mountains having a conic crown, brown bark that peels in shreds, and small sharp needles
subtype: Bermuda_cedar__Juniperus_bermudiana ornamental densely pyramidal juniper of Bermuda; fairly large for a juniper
subtype: east_African_cedar__Juniperus_procera tropical African timber tree with fragrant wood
subtype: southern_red_cedar__Juniperus_silicicola juniper of swampy coastal regions of southeastern United States; similar to eastern red cedar
subtype: savin__dwarf_juniper__dwarfjuniper__Juniperus_sabina procumbent or spreading juniper
subtype: common_juniper__Juniperus_communis densely branching shrub or small tree having pungent blue berries used to flavor gin; widespread in northern hemisphere; only conifer on coasts of Iceland and Greenland
subtype: dwarf_juniper__dwarfjuniper__ground_cedar__Juniperus_communis_depressa a procumbent variety of the common juniper
subtype: creeping_juniper__Juniperus_horizontalis low to prostrate shrub of Canada and northern United States; bronzed purple in winter
subtype: Mexican_juniper__drooping_juniper__Juniperus_flaccida small tree of western Texas and mountains of Mexico having spreading branches with drooping branchlets
subtype: sequoia__redwood either of two huge coniferous California trees that reach a height of 300 feet; sometimes placed in the Taxodiaceae
subtype: California_redwood__coast_redwood__coastredwood__Sequoia_sempervirens lofty evergreen of United States coastal foothills from Oregon to Big Sur
subtype: giant_sequoia__giantsequoia__big_tree__bigtree__sierraredwood__Sequoiadendron_giganteum__Sequoia_gigantea__Sequoia_Wellingtonia extremely lofty evergreen of southern end of western foothills of Sierra Nevada in California; largest living organism
subtype: pond_bald_cypress__bald_cypress__swamp_cypress__southern_cypress__Taxodium_distichum common cypress of southeastern United States having trunk expanded at base; found in coastal swamps and flooding river bottoms
subtype: pond_cypress__bald_cypress__Taxodium_ascendens smaller than and often included in the closely related Taxodium distichum
subtype: Montezuma_cypress__Mexican_swamp_cypress__Taxodium_mucronatum cypress of river valleys of Mexican highlands
subtype: ahuehuete literally "old man of the water": a giant specimen of great age and girth at Santa Maria del Tule
subtype: sandarac_tree__sandarac__Tetraclinis_articulata__Callitris_quadrivalvis large coniferous evergreen tree of North Africa and Spain having flattened branches and scalelike leaves yielding a hard fragrant wood; bark yields a resin used in varnishes
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