: any of a genus (Tilia of the family Malvaceae, the mallow family) of deciduous trees of temperate regions that have cordate leaves and a winglike bract attached to the peduncle of the flower and fruit and that are often planted as ornamental and shade trees: such as
a
: a commonly cultivated European tree (T. europaea synonym T. vulgaris) much used for ornamental planting
b
: a tree (T. americana) chiefly of the central and eastern U.S.
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Left alone, the little leaf linden tree can grow up to 80 feet tall; its long branches can span up to 50 feet wide.—
Sophia Beams,
Better Homes & Gardens,
1 July 2026 There was no indication that the American linden across the street from Abraham Lincoln’s home in Springfield was any different than any of the other 270 trees that populate the four-block National Historic Site along Eighth Street.—Chicago Tribune,
16 June 2026 The queen ceremonially planted a tree, a little-leaf linden, on the South Lawn.—
Kierra Frazier,
CBS News,
27 Apr. 2026 Instead, focus now on protection by wrapping young tree trunks — especially maples, lindens and honeylocust — against sunscald and frost cracks common with Colorado’s drastic winter temperature fluctuations.—
Special To The Denver Post,
Denver Post,
5 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for linden
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, made of linden wood, from Old English, from lind linden tree; probably akin to Old English līthe gentle — more at lithe
: any of a genus of trees with large heart-shaped leaves and drooping clusters of yellowish flowers that are often planted as ornamental or shade trees