treesap
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]treesap (uncountable)
- Uncommon spelling of tree sap.
- 1973, Corrective and Social Psychiatry and Journal of Applied Behavior Therapy[1], volume 19, page 30:
- From fruits, berries, flowers, honey, treesap, milk, from almost any plant or substance containing carbohydrate and sugar, primitive man made alcohol and drank it to “forget his sorrows.”
- 1979, Robert Wrigley, The Sinking of Clay City; republished as “The Sinking of Clay City”, in Craig Wollner, editor, A Richer Harvest: An Anthology of Work in the Pacific Northwest[4], 1999, →ISBN, page 181:
- When the last mine closed / and its timbers turned pliable as treesap, / the town began to tilt, to slide / back into its past like a wave.
- 1990 February 1, Tom Fegely, “Snow fleas insects of mystery”, in The News Journal, page 75:
- They’re present year-round, often swarming at the bases of trees in late winter and feeding on treesap released by a trunk scar or broken branch.