warwood

Etymology
. Perhaps at least partly an allusion to koa, a tree endemic to Hawaii with wood similar in quality to , black walnut, and whose name in Hawaiian can also mean warrior, or to beefwood which also has deep-colored, hard wood and in some Polynesian languages shares the same association between the name and words for warriors (both cognate with the Hawaiian term).

Noun

 * 1) Wood used for military materiel, especially in the context of historical warfare
 * 2) * 1880, Gerald Manley Hopkins, "Spring and fall to a young child" in T.M. Flormata-Ballesteros, Speech and Oral Communication, page 144, ISBN 9715740693.
 * By and by, nor spare a sigh
 * Though worlds of warwood leafmeal lie
 * By and by, nor spare a sigh
 * Though worlds of warwood leafmeal lie