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wattle
[ wot-l ]
noun
- Often wattles. a number of rods or stakes interwoven with twigs or tree branches for making fences, walls, etc.
- wattles, a number of poles laid on a roof to hold thatch.
- (in Australia) any of various acacias whose shoots and branches were used by the early colonists for wattles, now valued especially for their bark, which is used in tanning.
- a fleshy lobe or appendage hanging down from the throat or chin of certain birds, as the domestic chicken or turkey.
verb (used with object)
- to bind, wall, fence, etc., with wattle or wattles.
- to roof or frame with or as if with wattles.
- to form into a basketwork; interweave; interlace.
- to make or construct by interweaving twigs or branches:
to wattle a fence.
adjective
- built or roofed with wattle or wattles.
wattle
1/ ˈɒə /
noun
- a frame of rods or stakes interwoven with twigs, branches, etc, esp when used to make fences
- the material used in such a construction
- a loose fold of skin, often brightly coloured, hanging from the neck or throat of certain birds, lizards, etc
- any of various chiefly Australian acacia trees having spikes of small brightly coloured flowers and flexible branches, which were used by early settlers for making fences See also golden wattle
- a southern African caesalpinaceous tree, Peltophorum africanum, with yellow flowers
verb
- to construct from wattle
- to bind or frame with wattle
- to weave or twist (branches, twigs, etc) into a frame
adjective
- made of, formed by, or covered with wattle
wattle
2/ ˈɒə /
adjective
- dialect.of poor quality
Derived Forms
- ˈɲٳٱ, adjective
Other yvlog Forms
- ܲ·ɲt adjective
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of wattle1
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of wattle1
Example Sentences
The logo depicted a red tulip and a golden wattle - the national flowers of Australia and Afghanistan - entwined around a cricket ball.
In comparison, carbon-capture plantations are usually monocultures and are dominated globally by just five tree species -- teak, mahogany, cedar, silk oak, and black wattle -- that are grown for timber, pulp, or agroforestry.
The victims: Banksias, wattles, gum trees, and more.
Titled “Immersion,” Clarke’s artwork is made of plywood paths set against straw wattles, with the coiled straw nodding to Cahuilla basket weaving traditions.
The seasonal link between, say, a wattle flowering and the arrival of fish species is breaking down.
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