Deciduous (Latin de-: down, -cid-: fall, -uous: pertaining to) trees.
Every tree except the Evergreens.
Any deciduous tree will lose all it's leaves in the autumn.
Deciduous trees
They are called coniferous trees. Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn. Coniferous trees KEEP their leaves in autumn.
It's a kind of tree - one which loses its leaves in the autumn (as opposed to an evergreen which - as the name suggests - stays green all year)
An evergreen.
deciduous
If a tree loses all its leaves in the Summer the chances are it is dead. If it loses its leaves in Autumn, and is deciduous, then it will grow new ones in Spring.
A deciduous tree loses it's leaves in the autumn and it's wood is classed as a hardwood.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in autumn, facing winter with bare branches.
Deciduous trees lose their leaves in the autumn. Mostly these are broadleaf trees, but some conifers are also deciduous. In New Zealand, there are only a couple of species that mostly lose their leaves in the winter. The generalization that broadleaf trees lose their leaves in the winter is a northern hemisphere misbelief.
A Christmas tree is an evergreen that keeps its green needles all year round. A maple tree is deciduous. It loses its leaves in the autumn and is naked all winter, growing new leaves in the spring.