berry wax, noun phrase
a. historical. A high quality wax produced by boiling the berries of Myrica cordifolia of the Myricaceae, used for polishes and candles by early colonists.
[1789 Lady A. Barnard in Lord Lindsay Lives of Lindsays (1849) III. 396The vegetable wax which the Vrow Alleng’s slaves were stewing from berries, of which I saw a stock of green dull candles made.]
b. rare. wax-berry sense b.
1913 H. Tucker Our Beautiful Peninsula 75The red marbles of the berry-wax gleam against the white background.
A high quality wax produced by boiling the berries of Myrica cordifolia of the Myricaceae, used for polishes and candles by early colonists.

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