massaranduba
See also: Massaranduba
English
WOTD – 21 February 2017
Etymology
Borrowed from Portuguese maçaranduba, from Tupian.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌmæsəɹænˈduːbə/
- Hyphenation: mas‧sa‧ran‧du‧ba
Noun
massaranduba (plural massarandubas)
- A tropical hardwood tree, Manilkara bidentata.
- 1882, “A vegetable cow”, in The Iowa Normal Monthly; A Magazine Devoted to Education, volume 6, Dubuque, Iowa: Iowa Normal Monthly Pub. Co., OCLC 31266411, page 422:
- The famous polo de vaca, or "cow-tree" of South America, called massaranduba by the natives, belongs to the natural order of the Atrocarpads, which, by what might appear a curious coincidence, includes also the celebrated bread-fruit.
- 1867, [Thomas] Mayne Reid, Afloat in the Forest, or, A Voyage among the Tree-tops, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor and Fields, OCLC 9379166; republished New York, N.Y.: T. R. Knox, 1884, OCLC 24617541, page 157:
- The massaranduba is not the only species known as palo de vaca, or cow-tree. There are many others so called, whose sap is of a milky nature.
- 2005, Arthur O[lney] Friel, “The Tailed Men”, in Amazon Nights: Classic Adventure Tales from the Pulps, [Holicong, Pa.]: Wildside Press, →ISBN, page 97:
- Then the huge reddish trunks of massarandubas began to slide past us, their lofty crowns matting together so thickly that they seemed to make a solid roof.
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Synonyms
Further reading
massaranduba on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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