||Thu"ja (?), n. [NL., from Gr. &?; an
African tree with sweet-smelling wood.] (Bot.) A genus of
evergreen trees, thickly branched, remarkable for the distichous
arrangement of their branches, and having scalelike, closely imbricated, or
compressed leaves. [Written also thuya.] See Thyine
wood.
&fist; Thuja occidentalis is the Arbor vitæ of the
Eastern and Northern United States. T. gigantea of North-waetern
America is a very large tree, there called red cedar, and canoe
cedar, and furnishes a useful timber.
||Thu"ja (?), n. [NL., from Gr. &?; an
African tree with sweet-smelling wood.] (Bot.) A genus of
evergreen trees, thickly branched, remarkable for the distichous
arrangement of their branches, and having scalelike, closely imbricated, or
compressed leaves. [Written also thuya.] See Thyine
wood.
&fist; Thuja occidentalis is the Arbor vitæ of the
Eastern and Northern United States. T. gigantea of North-waetern
America is a very large tree, there called red cedar, and canoe
cedar, and furnishes a useful timber.