Pecan
Pronunciation
Origin
Borrowed into English from the French word pacane and at first spelt paccan. The French word derives from an word,
2005, Webster's New College Dictionary II http://books.google.com.ar/books?id=OL60E3r2yiYC&pg=PA829&dq=%22paccan%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=d0gkT_mwH8ahtwf8r4GiCw&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=%22paccan%22&f=false (ISBN 9780618396016), page 829: paccan
perhaps Miami (Illinois) pakani. Compare Cree pakan ("hard nut"), Ojibwe bagaan, Abenaki pagann, bagôn, pagôn ("nut; walnut, hazelnut").
Full definition of pecan
Noun
pecan
(plural pecans)- A deciduous tree, , of the central and southern United States, having deeply furrowed bark, pinnately compound leaves, and edible nuts.
- 1885, Howard Seely, A Ranchman's stories, page 154:And away on the farther bank, a motte of huge pecans, standing like giant sentinels over the dwarfed landscape, filled the eye with remote vistas in their shady, twilight aisles. It was very still.
- 1978 April, in the Texas Monthly, page 51:Within its ornamental fence, the 8/10-acre property includes several of the largest live oaks in the area — plus huge pecans and stately magnolias.
- A smooth, thin-shelled, edible oval nut of this tree.
- 1982, Beth Henley, Crimes of the heart, page 17:MEG. ... (Meg takes out two pecans and tries to open them by cracking them together.) Come on ... Crack, you demons! Crack!LENNY. We have a nutcracker!MEG. (Trying with her teeth.) Ah, where's the sport in a nutcracker? Where's the challenge?
- A half of the edible portion of the inside of this nut.
- 2005, in The Condensed Encyclopedia of Healing Foods (Joseph Pizzorno, Lara Pizzorno; Atria Books, ISBN 978-0-7434-7402-3):Each shell contains two pecans, usually plump and oblong in shape, although some varieties are round or pointed.