manioc
See also: Manioc
English
Etymology
From Middle French manioc and Spanish mandioca, ultimately from Old Tupi manioka.
Noun
manioc (usually uncountable, plural maniocs)
- (countable, uncountable) The tropical plant Manihot esculenta, from which cassava and tapioca are prepared.
- 1975, William R. Bascom, African Dilemma Tales, Mouton (De Gruyter), page 86,
- The banana, the most important crop above ground, quarreled with the manioc, the most important underground crop. […] The manioc said that it, the yam, the sweet potato, and others were the ones that fed people and that without them people could not exist.
- 1977, Donald W. Lathrap, Our Father the Cayman, Our Mother the Gourd, Charles A. Reed (editor), Origins of Agriculture, Mouton (De Gruyter), page 741,
- The selection process leading to the bitter group of maniocs has been in terms of higher starch yield and in terms of starch of a quality more appropriate for making bread ans flour.
- 1988, Robert L. Carneiro, 5: Indians of the Amazonian Rainforest, Julie Sloan Denslow, Christine Padoch (editors), People of the Tropical Rain Forest, University of California Press, page 82,
- Manioc, the main subsistence crop of Amazonia, is planted entirely from cuttings, which are inserted into mounds hoed up in the spaces left between the logs and the stumps.
- 1993, Jonathan D. Sauer, Historical Geography of Crop Plants: A Select Roster, CRC Press, page 60,
- Manioc was first reported being grown on the mainland in 1635 at the Portuguese post at Bissau.
- 2003, Ian Spencer Hornsey, A History of Beer and Brewing, Royal Society of Chemistry, page 26,
- Manioc gives the highest yield of starch per hectare of any known crop; some 90% of the fabric of the crop can be regarded as potentially fermentable carbohydrate.
- 1975, William R. Bascom, African Dilemma Tales, Mouton (De Gruyter), page 86,
- (uncountable) Cassava root, eaten as a food.
- 2006, Dietland Muller-Schwarze, Chemical Ecology of Vertebrates, Cambridge University Press, page 321,
- Ground manioc (cassava) is mixed with water and pressed through tube woven from palm fibers to remove toxic cyanogenic compounds.
- 2013, Elizabeth Ewart, Space and Society in Central Brazil: A Panará Ethnography, Bloomsbury, page 174,
- She made manioc pie, got water, got wild banana leaves and pounded manioc. She made the earth oven and later she opened and took out the manioc pie.
- 2006, Dietland Muller-Schwarze, Chemical Ecology of Vertebrates, Cambridge University Press, page 321,
- (uncountable) A food starch prepared from the root.
Synonyms
Translations
tropical plant
root
starch
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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References
manioc on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Manihot on Wikispecies.Wikispecies manioc on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /manjɔk/
Further reading
- “manioc” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
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