Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Mahwa tree \Mah"wa tree`\ (Bot.)
An East Indian sapotaceous tree ({Bassia latifolia}, and also
{B. butyracea}), whose timber is used for wagon wheels, and
the flowers for food and in preparing an intoxicating drink.
It is one of the butter trees. The oil, known as mahwa and
yallah, is obtained from the kernels of the fruit.
Butter \But"ter\ (b[u^]t"t[~e]r), n. [OE. botere, butter, AS.
butere, fr. L. butyrum, Gr. boy`tyron; either fr. boy`s ox,
cow + tyro`s cheese; or, perhaps, of Scythian origin. Cf.
{Cow}.]
1. An oily, unctuous substance obtained from cream or milk by
churning.
2. Any substance resembling butter in degree of consistence,
or other qualities, especially, in old chemistry, the
chlorides, as butter of antimony, sesquichloride of
antimony; also, certain concrete fat oils remaining nearly
solid at ordinary temperatures, as butter of cacao,
vegetable butter, shea butter.
{Butter and eggs} (Bot.), a name given to several plants
having flowers of two shades of yellow, as {Narcissus
incomparabilis}, and in the United States to the toadflax
({Linaria vulgaris}).
{Butter boat}, a small vessel for holding melted butter at
table.
{Butter flower}, the buttercup, a yellow flower.
{Butter print}, a piece of carved wood used to mark pats of
butter; -- called also {butter stamp}. --Locke.
{Butter tooth}, either of the two middle incisors of the
upper jaw.
{Butter tree} (Bot.), a tree of the genus {Bassia}, the seeds
of which yield a substance closely resembling butter. The
butter tree of India is the {B. butyracea}; that of Africa
is the Shea tree ({B. Parkii}). See {Shea tree}.
{Butter trier}, a tool used in sampling butter.
{Butter wife}, a woman who makes or sells butter; -- called
also {butter woman}. [Obs. or Archaic]