chaparral
English
Etymology
From Spanish chaparral, from chaparro + -al, from Basque txaparro, from txapar, from saphar.
Pronunciation
Noun
chaparral (countable and uncountable, plural chaparrals)
- A region of shrubs, typically dry in the summer and rainy in the winter. The coast of the Mediterranean is such a region.
- 1920, Peter B. Kyne, chapter IV, in The Understanding Heart:
- It was quite dark when, after an arduous climb, the sheriff made his tortuous way through the chaparral to the point where Anthony Garland should be stationed.
-
- The foliage of creosote bush, Larrea divaricata, when used as a medicinal herb.
Translations
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t͡ʃapaˈral/
- Hyphenation: cha‧par‧ral
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