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carob tree

NOUN
  1. evergreen Mediterranean tree with edible pods; the biblical carob

How To Use carob tree In A Sentence

  • And when you taste the final product in the form of a carob cake, you'll have no doubt the humble carob tree has a great future!
  • The carob tree has fruit called carob beans which are mostly identical in size.
  • There's 30,000 carob trees, seedlings and root stock at Limestone Station near Silverton.
  • By the husks on which the prodigal is said, in his hunger, to have fed himself, we are not to understand exactly what is meant by the English word husks, but a certain fruit, the fruit of the carob tree, which grows in pods and has a mealy and sweet taste. Sermons for the New Life.
  • • Locust-bean gum, from seeds of the carob tree, Ceratonia siliqua On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • Then, as I looked back at the dark, inscrutable carob tree, I did feel a faint touch of fear.
  • This area belongs to the carob tree forest located in a saline depression between the annual 300-400 mm isohyets.
  • The bright, sparkling space adorned with Trinidadian flags and lively with island tunes has a lot of nice house-made touches like the sweet and deadly Scotch-bonnet hot sauce and drinks like mauby, an unforgiving, bitter, and debatably restorative cold infusion made from the steeped bark of the carob tree. Chicago Reader
  • His glaze was equally complex and equally secret, and he took both recipes to his grave when he hung himself from a carob tree in 1786.
  • Miró's obsessive attention to a kind of personal storehouse of imagery, the carob tree, the animals and insects of Catalonia, his footprints in the place he fell to earth, begins to find its full expression in this painting. Joan Miró: A life in paintings
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