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timber

noun
That sort of wood which is proper for building or for tools, utensils, furniture, carriages, fences, ships and the like. We apply the word to standing trees which are suitable for the uses above mentioned, as a forest contains excellent timber; or to the beams, rafters, scantling, boards, plankshewed or sawed from such trees. Of all the species of trees useful as timber, in our climate, the white oak and the white pine hold the ffirst place in importance.

timber

The body or stem of a tree.

timber

The materials; in irony. Such dispositions--are the fittest timber to make politics of.

timber

A single piece or squared stick of wood for building, or already framed. Many of the timbers were decayed.

timber

In ships, a timber is a rib or curving piece of wood, branching outward from the keel in a vertical direction. One timber is composed of several pieces united in one frame.

timber

verb transitive
To furnish with timber.

timber

verb intransitive
To light on a tree.

timber

In falconry, to make a nest. Timber or timmer of furs, as of martens, ermines, sables and the like, denotes forty skins; of other skins, one hundred and twenty. Timber of ermine, in heraldry, denote the ranks or rows of ermine in noblemen’s coats.