genipap
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Brazilian Portuguese jenipapo, from Old Tupi îanypaba. The Tupi meaning of the word is variously given as yandi-pawa or yandi-pab (“fruit for painting”),[1] yandi-ibá-pab (“fruit of the extremities for painting”),[2] and without citation or explanation, “breast of an old woman”.[3]
Noun
genipap (plural genipaps)
- The North and South American tree Genipa americana of the family Rubiaceae.
- 2023, Nigel Smith, Amazon Fruits: An Ethnobotanical Journey, Springer Nature, →ISBN, page 1109:
- Genipap is wild and cultivated in many parts of the Amazon, especially on floodplains, from the river's mouth to the Andean foothills in Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia.
- The fruit of this tree, oval in shape, as a large as a small orange, of a pale greenish color, and with dark purple juice, traditionally used as a colorant.
- Synonym: genip
- 2019, Luzia Valentina Modolo, Mary Ann Foglio, editors, Brazilian Medicinal Plants, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 190:
- Unripe genipap fruits are widely used by indigenous tribes to extract the blue pigment, exposing the inside part of the fruit to the air.
Translations
References
- ^ Antonio Pamies, Lei Chunyi, Margaret Craig (2015) “"Fruits are Results": On the Interaction between Universal Archi-Metaphors, Ethno-Specific Culturemes and Phraseology”, in Journal of Social Sciences, volume 11, number 3, Science Publications, , →ISSN
- ^ Caspar Barlaeus (1974) Cláudio Brandão and Mário G. Ferri, editors, História dos feitos recentemente praticados durante oito anos no Brasil, →OCLC, page 385, column 2
- ^ Lothar Staeck (2022) Fascination Amazon River: Its People, Its Animals, Its Plants, Springer Nature, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 65
Further reading
- Genipa americana on Wikipedia.Wikipedia