S: (n) poplar (soft light-colored non-durable wood of the poplar)
S: (n) sandalwood (close-grained fragrant yellowish heartwood of the true sandalwood; has insect repelling properties and is used for carving and cabinetwork)
S: (n) boxwood, Turkish boxwood (very hard tough close-grained light yellow wood of the box (particularly the common box); used in delicate woodwork: musical instruments and inlays and engraving blocks)
S: (n) maple (wood of any of various maple trees; especially the hard close-grained wood of the sugar maple; used especially for furniture and flooring)
S: (n) ebony (hard dark-colored heartwood of the ebony tree; used in cabinetwork and for piano keys)
S: (n) sycamore, lacewood (variably colored and sometimes variegated hard tough elastic wood of a sycamore tree)
S: (n) teak, teakwood (hard strong durable yellowish-brown wood of teak trees; resistant to insects and to warping; used for furniture and in shipbuilding)
S: (n) dogwood (hard tough wood of any dogwood of the genus Cornus; resembles boxwood)
S: (n) sapwood (newly formed outer wood lying between the cambium and the heartwood of a tree or woody plant; usually light colored; active in water conduction)
S: (n) heartwood, duramen (the older inactive central wood of a tree or woody plant; usually darker and denser than the surrounding sapwood)
S: (n) nurse log (a large decomposing tree trunk that has fallen, usually in a forest; the decaying wood provides moisture and nutrients for a variety of insects and plants)
S: (n) saw log (log large enough to be sawed into boards)
S: (n) cutin ((biochemistry) a waxy transparent material that occurs in the cuticle of plants and consists of highly polymerized esters of fatty acids)
S: (n) chaff, husk, shuck, stalk, straw, stubble (material consisting of seed coverings and small pieces of stem or leaves that have been separated from the seeds)
S: (n) cork (outer bark of the cork oak; used for stoppers for bottles etc.)