What is the meaning of CANE. Phrases containing CANE
See meanings and uses of CANE!CANE
CANE
CANE
CANE
CANE
CANE
Acronyms & AI meanings
Aplichau Kaifong Primary School
Tourism Holdings Limited
Advanced Scatterometer
Public Libraries Evaluation Group
Coastal Upwelling Ecosystem Analysis
Langley Free Press
Substitute Employment Management System
Preparatory Action in Security Research
Lake Forest Library (Lake Forest, IL)
Arne Steiff Seminare
CANE
CANE
CANE
n.
The Chinese name of one or two species of bamboo, or jointed cane, of the genus Phyllostachys. The slender stems are much used for walking sticks.
imp. & p. p.
of Cane
a.
Producing sugar; as, sacchariferous canes.
n.
One of the series of boilers in which the cane juice is treated in making sugar; especially, the last boiler of the series.
n.
A walking stick; a staff; -- so called because originally made of one the species of cane.
n.
Any plant with long, hard, elastic stems, as reeds and bamboos of many kinds; also, the sugar cane.
n.
A kind of intoxicating liquor distilled from cane juice, or from the scummings of the boiled juice, or from treacle or molasses, or from the lees of former distillations. Also, sometimes used colloquially as a generic or a collective name for intoxicating liquor.
v. t.
To beat with a cane.
v. t.
To free from trash, or worthless matter; hence, to lop; to crop, as to trash the rattoons of sugar cane.
n.
Stems of other plants are sometimes called canes; as, the canes of a raspberry.
n.
A lance or dart made of cane.
n.
Cane sugar; sucrose; also, in general, any one of the group of which saccharose, or sucrose proper, is the type. See Sucrose.
n.
A stalk or shoot of sugar cane of the first growth from the cutting. The growth of the second and following years is of inferior quality, and is called rattoon.
n.
A thicket of canes.
v. t.
To make or furnish with cane or rattan; as, to cane chairs.
n.
A bitter white crystalline substance obtained from the saccharinates and regarded as the lactone of saccharinic acid; -- so called because formerly supposed to be isomeric with cane sugar (saccharose).
n.
A genus of tall tropical grasses including the sugar cane.
n.
Especially, loppings and leaves of trees, bruised sugar cane, or the like.
n.
Any one of several species of small, brilliantly colored American birds of the genus Rhamphomicron. They have a long, slender, sharp bill, and feed upon honey, insects, and the juice of the sugar cane.
n.
A genus of trees of the order Canellaceae, growing in the West Indies.
CANE
CANE