wine palm
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A type of palm tree: A tall fan palm tree (Borassus flabellifer, or related species like Caryota urens) native to regions including Africa, India, and Malaysia. It is valued for its hard wood, its leaves used for thatching and weaving, and especially for its sweet sap. 2. A source of palm products: The tree from which palm wine, a brown sugar (jaggery), and sometimes sago are derived.
Usage and Examples
- The wine palm is a crucial economic tree in many rural communities.
- They tapped the wine palm to collect the sap for making toddy.
- The strong, durable wood of the wine palm is used in construction.
Advanced Usage
- The term wine palm can refer specifically to the Palmyra palm () or, in some contexts, the fishtail palm (), both known for their fermentable sap.
- In botanical or agricultural texts, it is often discussed for its multiple yields: "The wine palm provides not only beverage but also food and material."
Variants and Related Words
- Palmyra palm: Another common name for , a primary species referred to as wine palm.
- Toddy palm: A synonym emphasizing the tree's use for producing toddy (palm wine).
- Palm wine: The alcoholic beverage made from the fermented sap of this and similar palms.
- Jaggery: The traditional non-centrifugal cane sugar, but also the brown sugar made from the concentrated sap of the wine palm.
Synonyms
- Toddy palm
- Palmyra palm (for )
Notes on Meaning
The meaning is primarily botanical and economic. It denotes not just the physical tree but its functional role as a source of vital products (sap for wine/sugar, leaves for thatch, wood, pith for sago). The "wine" in the name directly points to its most famous product.
Noun
- tall fan palm of Africa and India and Malaysia yielding a hard wood and sweet sap that is a source of palm wine and sugar; leaves used for thatching and weaving
- fishtail palm of India to Malay Peninsula; sap yields a brown sugar (jaggery) and trunk pith yields sago