MULBERRY

Source: 556, 566, 567

Mulberry. Mulberry
Heb. bakah, “to weep;” rendered “Baca” (R.V., “weeping”) in Ps. 84:6. The plural form of the Hebrew bekaim is rendered “mulberry trees” in 2 Sam. 5:23, 24 and 1 Chr. 14:14, 15. The tree here alluded to was probably the aspen or trembling poplar. “We know with certainty that the black poplar, the aspen, and the Lombardy poplar grew in Palestine. The aspen, whose long leaf-stalks cause the leaves to tremble with every breath of wind, unites with the willow and the oak to overshadow the watercourses of the Lebanon, and with the oleander and the acacia to adorn the ravines of Southern Palestine” (Kitto). By “the sound of a going in the tops of the mulberry trees” we are to understand a rustling among the trees like the marching of an army. This was the signal that the Lord himself would lead forth David’s army to victory. (See SYCAMINE.)

---

mulberry. Mulberry, n. the name of a tree or its fruit

---

Mul″ber‐ry (?), n.; pl. Mulberries (#). [[OE. moolbery, murberie, AS. murberie, where the first part is fr. L. morum mulberry; cf. Gr. �, �. Cf. Murrey, Sycamore.]] 1. 1. (Bot.) The berry or fruit of any tree of the genus Morus; also, the tree itself. See Morus.
2. 2. A dark pure color, like the hue of a black mulberry.
Mulberry mass. (Biol.) See Morula. — Paper mulberry, a tree (Broussonetia papyrifera), related to the true mulberry, used in Polynesia for making tapa cloth by macerating and pounding the inner bark, and in China and Japan for the manufacture of paper. It is seen as a shade tree in America.