桄榔
Chinese
phonetic | |||
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simp. and trad. (桄榔) |
桄 | 榔 | |
variant forms | 桄桹 |
Etymology
Recorded in the Book of the Later Han, where it was described as a product of the Gouding kingdom in China's south. Ji Han (嵇含, died 307 CE), the author of Nanfang Caomu Zhuang (“Plants of the Southern Regions”), says:
- Inside the bark there is a dust resembling flour, sometimes as much as several hu (斛). When eaten it is just like ordinary flour.
This word was borrowed from a Kra-Dai language (Li, 2002). Compare Proto-Kra-Dai *klaŋ > Zhuang go'gvang (“palm tree”, go: plant prefix), Bouyei faixguangl (“palm tree”) (idem).
Pronunciation
Derived terms
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