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The manchineel tree can be found near to (and on) coastal beaches.
This refers to the fact that manchineel is one of the most poisonous trees in the world.
Burned your hand on the caustic sap of the manchineel tree?
The Manchineel tree is listed as an endangered species in Florida.
When she gets there, she is almost poisoned by a poisonous manchineel tree.
Manchineel returned to Kwajalein 2 June to resume net operations.
"And your people believe an assassin of Ammar's caliber wouldn't stoop to using manchineel?"
To Europeans, the manchineel quickly became notorious.
The islanders were now very near the English hideouts; the fighters drew out an arrow each, dipped it in manchineel and took aim.
She then commits suicide by inhaling the perfume of the poisonous blossoms of the Manchineel tree.
The name should not be confused with the unrelated Manchineel, a poisonous tree which is not a member of the Anacardiaceae.
"Manchineel, or poison guava as it's called, is native to the Caribbean and gulf coast of Mexico," Brogan continued.
"We'll need two days to gather equipment and finish stocking Jillian's ketch in Manchineel Bay.
Above the marble cladding, the mihrab niche is crowned with a half dome-shaped vault made of manchineel bentwood.
A strange tree, the manchineel; slaves always made a fuss when ordered to cut one down; they claimed the sap burned their skin, like drops of acid.
Their leader, Miss Konecky, pushes a member into the river in time to prevent the girl from posing under the Manchineel, with menacing clouds overhead.
Rafael Sabatini in The Chronicles of Captain Blood describes poisoning by manchineel fruit juice:
After removing the nets around the atoll, Manchineel continued on to Kwajalein 22 September, arriving 4 days later for net tending duties until 20 May 1945.
They found fifty times the sarin required to kill inside the flight crew's bodies, but their tests showed the passengers died from ingesting manchineel in the flight meal."
The heroine of Giacomo Meyerbeer's 1865 opera L'Africaine commits suicide by lying under a manchineel tree and inhaling the plant's vapours.
Except for a week at Eniwetok in July, Manchineel remained in the Kwajalein area through the announcement of Japan's surrender 15 August.
Manchineel decommissioned 11 March 1946, was stripped at Mare Island Naval Shipyard, and was struck from the Navy list 12 April.
In Meyerbeer's opera L'Africaine (1865), the heroine Sélika dies by inhaling the perfume of the poisonous blossoms of the Manchineel tree.
The manchineel tree, Hippomane mancinella, is a species of flowering plant in the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae), and the only species in the monotypic genus Hippomane.
Following shakedown off San Pedro, California, Manchineel departed 22 June for the South Pacific Ocean, arriving Pearl Harbor 1 July.