different between tamarack vs lodgepole

tamarack

English

Etymology

From Canadian French tamarac, believed to derive from an Algonquian word.

In the 19th century, some authorities questioned if tacamahac, tamarack, and hackmatack could be cognate to one another, perhaps all corruptions of one term, but such cognacy is unlikely.

Noun

tamarack (countable and uncountable, plural tamaracks)

  1. Any of several North American larches, of the genus Larix.
    • 2005, Joseph Boyden, Three Day Road, Penguin 2008, p. 36:
      The women peeled tamarack bark for tea, dug through the deep snow in hopes of finding a few dried fiddleheads.
  2. The wood from such a tree.

Synonyms

  • hackmatack
  • tacamahac

References

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lodgepole

English

Etymology

lodge +? pole

Noun

lodgepole (plural lodgepoles)

  1. A lodgepole pine or its wood.

lodgepole From the web:

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