Medium-sized two-needled pine of southern Europe having a spreading crown; widely cultivated for its sweet seeds that resemble almonds.
1The seeds of the Pinus pinea, or stone pine or umbrella pine.
2The place itself was just a shack opposite a stone pine.
3It's nothing to look at and it hides fallen cones from his valuable stone pine.
4Pines.- Ihaveonly met with three varieties-thePinus maritima, Pinus laricio, and the stone pine.
5They never saw a stone pine or a eucalyptus but they named and admired it; they never glimpsed Soracte but they exclaimed.
6The sub-species has its origins in the Mediterranean basin, and its cousin -the " stone pine" -also has its roots in Spain and Portugal.
7For we were near enough now to see stone pines and chestnut-trees.
8Lilly Wing lives on a street shaded and scented by stone pines.
9She gathered the pine nuts from the stone pines near the river.
10Young hemlocks and stone pines glistened with rime ice like bodies emerging from water.
11The great wood of stone pines on the Pisan Maremma was his favourite study.
12And there-justcaught between two stone pines-inthe dim blue distance rose the great dome.
13She had even added some oily pine nuts from the cones of the stone pines.
14The snow, rolled to hard pellets by the wind, rattled like hailstones against the trunks of stone pines.
15Fronting the shops and restaurants beyond the deep sidewalks, eighty-foot stone pines spread wings of branches across the street.
16The islands are thickly clothed with tamarisks and pollarded acacias and stone pines, and are reputed to be somewhat malarial.