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Leaves Leaf Trees Liːf Plant Coming Dead Spring

Word leaf
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / liːf / NAmE / liːf /
Example
  • lettuce/cabbage/oak leaves
  • the trees are just coming into leaf.
  • the dead leaves of autumn/the fall
  • a four-leaf clover
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Content

leaf

(noun)BrE / liːf / NAmE / liːf /
  1. a flat green part of a plant, growing from a stem or branch or from the root
    • see also bay leaf
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/bay-leaf
    • lettuce/cabbage/oak leaves
    • The trees are just coming into leaf.
    • the dead leaves of autumn/the fall
  2. having leaves of the type or number mentioned
    • a four-leaf clover
    • a broad-leaved plant
  3. a sheet of paper, especially a page in a book
    • see also flyleaf
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/flyleaf
    • She carefully turned the leaves of the precious volume.
  4. metal, especially gold or silver, in the form of very thin sheets
    • gold leaf
  5. a part of a table that can be lifted up or pulled into position in order to make the table bigger
  6. to copy somebody’s behaviour and do things in the same way that they do, because they are successful
  7. to change your way of life to become a better, more responsible person
  8. Extra Examples

    • Deciduous trees shed their leaves in autumn.
    • He picked a leaf from the basil plant and started to chew it.
    • In the spring the plant began to put out new leaves.
    • It was spring and the trees were coming into leaf.
    • Spring arrived and the first green leaves began to appear.
    • Stop trying to read tea leaves.
    • The boys helped by raking the leaves in the yard.
    • The corn was already ripening and the trees in full leaf.
    • The ground was thick with dead leaves.
    • The leaves rustled in the light breeze.
    • The summer was over and the leaves were beginning to turn.
    • This plant has beautifully variegated leaves.
    • Throw the tea leaves on the flower bed.
    • broad leaf plants
    • dry leaves blowing in the wind
    • the leaf litter on the forest floor

    Word Origin

    • Old English lēaf, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch loof and German Laub.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: l

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