Which countries get their names from trees?

The country names from trees are Brazil, named after its precious Brazilian wood-redwood. Cyprus is adjacent to Lebanon, and there is a kind of cypress called "Cyprus" in the place where the two countries border. The name of Cyprus comes from the name of this plant. Denmark's "Dan" originally means forest or sand embankment, and "Mai" means land or country. The name of the Netherlands evolved from the Germanic word "hot" (forest). The name of Switzerland was originally pronounced as Schweitzer, which was transformed from the name of Schweitzer. In ancient German, "Schwiertz" was pronounced as "burning", which means that this area was originally a vast forest, and it was only after burning that it was suitable for human habitation. The word Barbados means "long beard" in Portuguese, because an Indian fig tree grows widely on the island. Numerous drooping aerial roots often grow on this branch, much like a human beard, so Columbus sailed here and named it Barbados. Similarly, the names of some cities and regions come from this way. For example, Karel is the capital of Senegal, which means baobab (Bolobo) according to the meaning of the local name. Vientiane, the capital of Laos, means "the city of sandalwood" according to the original meaning of Laos, because it used to be rich in sandalwood.

Guatemala is rich and dense in forests, so it is called "forest country". In the local Indian language, "Guatemala" means forest country. Bhutan's forest coverage rate is as high as 123%, so Bhutan is also known as the "forest country". Congo is located on both sides of the equator and distributes a large area of tropical rain forest, so it has the alias of "timber country". Gabon not only has the highest forest coverage, but also produces Aubrey trees (namely "Gabonese olive") which are particularly suitable for plywood, so it has the nickname "plywood kingdom". Sweden also has an elegant nickname-"European Woodwork Factory". Suriname is located in the tropics. Because of its lush forests and developed wood processing industry, people often praise themselves as "the country of forests".

Some countries often have an elegant code name because they are rich in tree species that symbolize national sentiment or have great economic value. Japan is known as "the country of cherry blossoms". Canada is known as "the country of maple leaves"; Australia enjoys the reputation of "Eucalyptus Kingdom"; Malaysia is known as the "rubber kingdom"; The Philippines is the "Coconut King of the World"; Sri Lanka is a "black tea kingdom"; Portugal is a "country of cork".