Wood that is cut from a tree is commonly referred to as "lumber" or "timber," depending on its intended use and regional terminology. In general, "timber" often refers to larger, unprocessed wood, while "lumber" usually denotes wood that has been processed and milled for construction or manufacturing purposes. The term "logs" is also used to describe the raw, uncut sections of a tree trunk before further processing.
You call it wood
Lumber firms are to do with sawmilling timber: tree-felling is part of that. After the tree is cut down, the lumber firm can make with saws, planks of wood for building. The planks of wood are called lumber.
wood...and....leaves......
A Tree farm
You have to obviously cut it down
yes and no, wood lives if it on a living tree which is not cut down. But if it cut off something it is dead and not living!
A piece of wood is typically straight, as it is often cut from a tree trunk or branch. However, if the wood is in its natural, unprocessed form, it may have a round shape due to being part of the tree.
Probably from the way it was made. It was cut from a piece of quarter sawn wood, rather than a branch or small tree.
If the wood is old enough, it can be used. Do not use freshly cut wood as it will smoke too much. there are no poisons in grapefruit tree wood, so that is not an issue.
A tree Stump
Wood is a non-living thing. However, wood can be living. Wood contains cells and cells are one factor that defined living life. When a tree is still rooted and not cut - it is living. Therefore the wood it contains is living. When the tree is cut down - it dies. Therefore the wood it contains is dead.
Wood is a non-living thing. However, wood can be living. Wood contains cells and cells are one factor that defined living life. When a tree is still rooted and not cut - it is living. Therefore the wood it contains is living. When the tree is cut down - it dies. Therefore the wood it contains is dead.