| LABURNUM | Leguminous tree or shrub (8) |
| MESQUIT | Leguminous tree or shrub of North America with nutritious pods (7) |
| MESQUITE | Leguminous tree whose wood is often used as barbecue fuel in the southern USA |
| RAINTREE | Leguminous tree native to Central America with red-andyellow feathery flowers (4,4) |
| MAGNOLIA | Tree or shrub with goblet- or star-shaped flowers in spring; or, an off-white colour often used for household interior paint (8) |
| TAMARISK | Ornamental tree or shrub of the genus Tamarix having feathery clusters of pink or whitish flowers (8 |
| ESPALIER | Grown against the walls of Roman gardens, medieval castles, French chateaux or English estates, a fruit tree or shrub trained to grow flat (8) |
| GARDENIA | Evergreen tree or shrub of the madder family, with large fragrant tubular white or yellow flowers (8) |
| HAWTHORN | Thorny tree or shrub with reddish fruits (8) |
| CINCHONA | Tree or shrub whose dried bark yield quinine (8) |
| CHESTNUT | Deciduous tree or shrub in the genus Castanea (8) |
| CAROB | Leguminous tree native to the mideterranean bearing long, flat, leathery brown pods for food or fodder |
| REDBUD | American leguminous tree, Cercis canadensis, having heartshaped leaves (6) |
| EBOE | Central Amer. leguminous tree |
| BESMIRCH | Tree or shrub that English NCO's planted in soil (8) |
| MANGROVE | A tree or shrub that grows in mainly tropical coastal swamps and has roots above ground (8) |
| YELLOWWOOD | Leguminous tree of the southeastern US also called gopherwood (10) |
| TONKABEAN | Fragrant black almond-shaped seed of a tall leguminous tree of tropical America (5,4) |
| TONKABEANS | Fragrant black almond-shaped seeds of a tall leguminous tree of tropical America (5,5) |
| DHAK | Tropical Asian leguminous tree, also called Flame of the Forest, yielding a red resin (4) |