slender flexible branches or twigs (especially of willow or some canes); used for wickerwork
<noun.substance>
work made of interlaced slender branches (especially willow branches)
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Wicker \Wick"er\, n. [OE. wiker, wikir, osier, probably akin to AS. w[=i]can to give way. Cf. {Weak}.] 1. A small pliant twig or osier; a rod for making basketwork and the like; a withe.
2. Wickerwork; a piece of wickerwork, esp. a basket.
Then quick did dress His half milk up for cheese, and in a press Of wicker pressed it. --Chapman.
3. Same as 1st {Wike}. [Prov. Eng.]
Wicker \Wick"er\, a. Made of, or covered with, twigs or osiers, or wickerwork.
Each one a little wicker basket had, Made of fine twigs, entrail['e]d curiously. --Spenser.
Wike \Wike\, n. A temporary mark or boundary, as a bough of a tree set up in marking out or dividing anything, as tithes, swaths to be mowed in common ground, etc.; -- called also {wicker}. [Prov. Eng.]
Galeries guests were snapping up everything from cat-shaped porcelain teapots to wicker baskets, rugs and satin evening bags, priced very reasonably by Paris standards.
You can mix periods and styles as long as the room maintains its casual quality." For example, he says it's easily possible to put together a room that includes Shaker reproductions, primitive painted pieces and Victorian wicker.
In a porous wicker basket.
"You can do $300 a day, easy," said English, who formerly pushed the antique wicker chairs.
Angry locals, who like the traditional hand-pushed wicker versions better, say the newfangled gadgets aren't chairs, they're carts, and they're causing a "random riot" on the old-fashioned walkway by the sea.
Dressed in white and clutching a Bible, Biamby's mother, Ketly Biamby, 69, sat in a wicker chair on the sidewalk facing the consulate when 25 armed police appeared and ordered her and four other relatives and friends to leave.
Officials of the Beijing Institute of Science and Technology arrived with wicker baskets of steamed bread for those students not hunger striking.