Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for paloverde. Search instead for paloverdes.

paloverde

American  
[pal-oh-vur-dee, -vurd] / ˌpæl oʊˈvɜr di, -ˈvɜrd /

noun

  1. a spiny, desert shrub, Cercidium floridum, of the legume family, of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, having green bark.


Etymology

Origin of paloverde

First recorded in 1850–55, from Spanish (Mexico, southwestern U.S.): literally, “green tree”

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

In that fragile period, it likely would have been sheltered by a “nurse tree ” — typically a paloverde, ironwood or mesquite — that protected it from animals and harsh weather.

From Washington Post

Keeping company with the ironwood trees are mesquite, paloverde, creosote and saguaro.

From Los Angeles Times

Even in this relatively lush desert there is only so much to occupy the gaze – limestone outcrops, prickly pear, paloverde, mesquite; the sky and its carnivorous birds – before that gaze turns inwards.

From The Guardian

The moment we entered, Schmidt’s wife, Li, presented us with a pudgy, furry, gray-yellow Centris pallida — a desert bee that specializes in pollinating the paloverde plant — that she found lying on her windshield that morning.

From New York Times

At its center stands a grand Stonehenge-like grouping of basalt columns and paloverde trees.

From The Wall Street Journal