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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ceiba

Ceiba \Ceiba\ n. a genus of tropical American trees with palmately compound leaves and showy bell-like flowers.

Syn: genus Ceiba.

Wiktionary
ceiba

n. The silk-cotton tree.

WordNet
Gazetteer
Ceiba, PR -- U.S. comunidad in Puerto Rico
Population (2000): 3698
Housing Units (2000): 1297
Land area (2000): 0.983157 sq. miles (2.546365 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.983157 sq. miles (2.546365 sq. km)
FIPS code: 16139
Located within: Puerto Rico (PR), FIPS 72
Location: 18.442885 N, 66.350125 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Ceiba, PR
Ceiba
Ceiba -- U.S. Municipio in Puerto Rico
Population (2000): 18004
Housing Units (2000): 6742
Land area (2000): 29.043362 sq. miles (75.221959 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 129.781375 sq. miles (336.132204 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 158.824737 sq. miles (411.354163 sq. km)
Located within: Puerto Rico (PR), FIPS 72
Location: 18.258444 N, 65.659878 W
Headwords:
Ceiba
Ceiba, PR
Ceiba Municipio
Ceiba Municipio, PR
Wikipedia
Ceiba

Ceiba is the name of a genus of many species of large trees found in tropical areas, including Mexico, Central America, South America, the Caribbean, West Africa, and Southeast Asia. Some species can grow to tall or more, with a straight, largely branchless trunk that culminates in a huge, spreading canopy, and buttress roots that can be taller than a grown person. The best-known, and most widely cultivated, species is Kapok, Ceiba pentandra, one of several trees called kapok.

Recent botanical opinion incorporates Chorisia within Ceiba, raising the number of species from 10 to 20 or more, and puts the genus as a whole within the family Malvaceae. Ceiba species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera ( butterfly and moth) species, including the leaf-miner Bucculatrix ceibae, which feeds exclusively on the genus.

Ceiba (disambiguation)

Ceiba is a genus of trees.

Ceiba may also refer to:

  • La Ceiba, a port city on the northern coast of Honduras
  • Ceiba, Puerto Rico, a small town in northeast Puerto Rico
  • Ceiba, a botanical journal
  • CEIBA Intercontinental, an airline

Usage examples of "ceiba".

Winston Smith returned from his assignation with a ceiba tree, all eyes were upon him.

He posed against a ceiba tree, his camouflage fatigues starched and creased, his jump wings flashing on his chest, an Uzi machine pistol slung casually over his right shoulder.

The sun stood at zenith, so hot and dry beating down on them that she began to think she was going to faint, but they finally stopped under the shade of a ceiba and she was allowed to drink from a jug of water stashed there.

He gazed sourly about him, thinking of the macabre figure in the ceiba tree and the scarlet pulp of what had been a living face.

Clouds seemed to break from his mind and with startling vividness he recalled the shadow-play of his conversation with the man in the ceiba tree and the alien, unintelligible replies.

Now when Alison entered his mind it was in company with Merchant-and Merchant led on to Lloyd, Lloyd to Vega, Vega to the unknown in the ceiba tree.

They walked along the river past the town and came to a spot where ceiba trees with slick green leaves and whitish bark and roots like alligator tails grew close to the shore, and there they ate and talked and listened to the water gulping against the clay bank, to the birds, to the faint noises from the airbase that at this distance sounded part of nature.

But the Caribe houses were in evidence, and the turtle stew was tasty, and the fishing was good, and Siete Altares was something out of a South Seas movie, each pool shaded by ceiba trees, their branches dripping with orchids, hummingbirds flitting everywhere in the thickets.

Lupe and I were lying among tall grasses beneath a ceiba tree, its boughs looped with epiphytic vines, and the vines studded with orchid blooms.

When I regained consciousness I was staring up through the crown of a ceiba tree.

On Friday some prison guards installed several women from La Ceiba in the third floor suite.

They walked along the river past the town and came to a spot where ceiba trees with massy crowns of slick green leaves and whitish bark and roots like alligator tails grew close to the shore, and there they ate and talked and listened to the water gulping against the clay bank, to the birds, to the faint noises from the airbase that at this distance sounded part of nature.

Very few people splashed through the mud to the family mausoleum, protected by a colonial ceiba tree whose branches spread over the cemetery wall.

On one of those Sundays he visited the new cemetery adjacent to the church, where the residents of La Manga were building their sumptuous pantheons, and his heart skipped a beat when he discovered the most sumptuous of all in the shade of the great ceiba trees.

Dense macca-fat palms stood next to silk-cotton, or ceiba, trees that soared out of sight, their tops obscured by the midgrowth.