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Teak
(redirected from Jati (tree))

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teak, tall deciduous tree (Tectona grandis) of the family Verbenaceae (verbena verbena, common name for some members of the Verbenaceae, a family of herbs, shrubs, and trees (often climbing forms) of warmer regions of the world. Well-known wild and cultivated members of the family include species of the shrubby Lantana and of
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 family), native to India and Malaysia but now widely cultivated in other tropical areas. Unfortunately, the wood of plantation teak is considered inferior to that of wild teak; consequently the wild populations are being decimated. Teakwood is moderately hard, easily worked, and extremely durable; beams said to be over 1,000 years old are still functional. The wood contains an essential oil that resists the action of water and prevents the rusting of iron. The heartwood is resistant to termites. Teak is superior to all other woods for shipbuilding and is also used for furniture, flooring, and general construction. Several other similar woods from unrelated trees are sometimes also called teak. Teak (Tectona grandis) is classified in the division Magnoliophyta Magnoliophyta , division of the plant kingdom consisting of those organisms commonly called the flowering plants, or angiosperms. The angiosperms have leaves, stems, and roots, and vascular, or conducting, tissue (xylem and phloem).
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, class Magnoliopsida, order Famiales, family Verbenaceae.

teak

Large deciduous tree (Tectona grandis) of the verbena family, and its wood, one of the most valuable and durable timbers. Teak has been widely used in India for more than 2,000 years; some temples contain teak beams more than 1,000 years old. The tree has a straight stem, often thickened at the base, a spreading crown, and four-sided branchlets. The rough leaves are opposite or sometimes whorled, and the branches end in many small white flowers. The unseasoned heartwood has a pleasant, strong aromatic fragrance and a beautiful golden-yellow colour, which on seasoning darkens into brown, mottled with darker streaks. Resistant to the effects of water, teakwood is used for shipbuilding, fine furniture, door and window frames, wharves, bridges, cooling-tower louvers, flooring, and paneling. Its desirability has led to severe overcutting in tropical forests.


teak
teak
1. a large verbenaceous tree, Tectona grandis, of the East Indies, having white flowers and yielding a valuable dense wood
2. any of various similar trees or their wood
3. the hard resinous yellowish-brown wood of this tree, used for furniture making, etc.
4. a brown or yellowish-brown colour

teak
A dark golden yellow or brown wood with a greenish or black cast, found in southeastern Asia, India, and Burma; moderately hard, coarse-grained, very durable; oil which it contains gives it a greasy feeling and makes it immune to the attack of insects; used for exterior construction, plywood, and decorative paneling; also called Indian oak.

Teak 

(Tectona grandis), a tree of the family Verbenaceae. Teak grows to 40–50 m in height and has large leaves 30–60 cm in length. The small flowers grow in panicles. The fruits are drupelike. Teak grows in deciduous forests of Asia, from India to Indonesia. It is cultivated in tropical regions of Asia for its valuable wood, which is used in the construction of ships, trains, and buildings and in furniture-making.

Teakwood is beautiful and has a narrow white alburnum and a yellowish heartwood that browns as it dries. The wood is very tough and resistant to decay, harmful insects, and chemicals, yet it is easily worked. Oldfieldia africana, a tree of the family Euphorbiaceae that grows in West Africa and yields valuable wood, is called African teak.



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