american elder
A small bird perches on a branch of an american elder to eat its dark berries.
Noun: 1. A species of shrub: A common, deciduous shrub native to central and eastern North America, scientifically known as Sambucus canadensis. It is characterized by clusters of small white flowers and dark purple-black berries.
The term "american elder" is used specifically to identify this particular North American plant species, often in botanical, horticultural, or foraging contexts to distinguish it from other related species like the European elder (Sambucus nigra).
- Noun:
- The american elder growing by the creek is full of ripe berries.
- For this recipe, you need the berries from the american elder, not the red elderberry.
- American elder is often used in landscaping for its attractive flowers and fruit.
- In botanical description: The term is used precisely to denote the specific taxon .
- Sambucus canadensis, commonly called american elder, thrives in moist soils.
- Common Names: American black elderberry, Canada elderberry, sweet elder.
- Scientific Name: .
- Related Plant: Elder or elderberry (more general terms that can refer to various plants in the genus ).
- Black elderberry (in a North American context)
- Canada elderberry
The primary meaning of "american elder" is botanical, referring to the specific shrub. It is not typically used in idiomatic expressions or phrasal verbs. The word "elder" alone can have other, unrelated meanings (e.g., a senior person, a church official), but the compound term "american elder" almost exclusively refers to the plant.
A small bird perches on a branch of an american elder to eat its dark berries.
- common elder of central and eastern North America bearing purple-black berries; fruit used in wines and jellies