urucum
English
Noun
urucum (uncountable)
- Achiote.
- 2006, William Bryant, The Birds of Paradise: Alfred Russel Wallace: a Life, p. 67:
- Martius found most dressed in bits of clothing, their hair wildly tangled and their faces dyed red with urucum.
- 2012, Daniel Everett, Language: The Cultural Tool, Profile 2013, p. 122:
- They paint them, or at least parts of them, with urucum (reddish) plant dye or even their own blood if there are no urucum plants nearby.
- 2013, Uchoa et al., ‘Antioxidant Properties of Singlet Oxygen Suppressors’, in Natural Antioxidants and Biocides from Wild Medicinal Plants, p. 78:
- Bixin results from lycopene oxidation and it is the main carotenoid found in the seed coat of urucum fruits (Bixa orellana L.), which is cultivated in tropical countries of South and Central America, Africa and Asia.
- 2006, William Bryant, The Birds of Paradise: Alfred Russel Wallace: a Life, p. 67:
Portuguese
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Guaraní urucul.
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˌu.ɾu.ˈkũ/
Noun
urucum m (plural urucuns)
- achiote (Bixa orellana, a tropical American evergreen shrub)
- achiote (seed of the achiote shrub)
- achiote (orange-red dye obtained from achiote seeds)
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