51Թ

Advertisement

Advertisement

Japanese larch

noun

  1. a tree, Larix kaempferi, of Japan, having bluish-green leaves and egg-shaped cones.


Discover More

51Թ History and Origins

Origin of Japanese larch1

First recorded in 1860–65
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

But if you’re too far away — or even if you’re there right now — I recommend their wonderful Instagram feed, which combines official and visitors’ photos, information for bird-watchers, capsule histories of the cemetery’s monuments and residents, and the occasional haiku about a Japanese larch.

From

At home, he is training a weeping Japanese larch to drape the railing of a raised deck.

From

The Forestry Commission said P. ramorum, first found in the UK in 2002, infected few trees until 2009 when the pathogen was found infecting and killing large numbers of Japanese larch trees - an important economic timber species - in South West England.

From

In the first recorded case of its kind in the world, P. ramorum was found infecting and killing large numbers of Japanese larch trees - a commercially important conifer species - in South-West England.

From

In 2009, it appeared on Japanese larch, an economically important timber species, in South-West England.

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement


Japanese lanternJapanese laurel