pomace

Betekenis (Engels)

  1. (countable, uncountable) The pulp or pulplike matter remaining from a substance pressed to extract its juice or oil.
  2. (countable, uncountable) The pulp or pulplike matter remaining from a substance pressed to extract its juice or oil.
  3. (countable, historical, uncountable) The pulp or pulplike matter remaining from a substance pressed to extract its juice or oil.
  4. (UK, archaic, countable, regional, uncountable) Synonym of pulp (“a soft, moist mass formed by mashing something”).
  5. (broadly, countable, obsolete, uncountable) Sheep offal.

Vertalings

aiguardent de brisa

μήλα τεθλιμμένα

Uitgespreek as (IPA)
/ˈpʌmɪs/
Etimologie (Engels)

[Alt: Red grape flesh and seeds] From Late Middle English pomis, pomys (“cider; pulp of plants pressed to extract their juice or oil”), probably from Medieval Latin pōmācium, pōmātium (“cider”), possibly a variant of pomaceum (although first attested later), from Latin pōmum (“fruit; fruit tree”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂epó (“away; off”) + *h₁em- (“to take”), in the sense of something taken off a tree) + -āceum (neuter form of -āceus (suffix meaning ‘belonging to; having the nature of’, forming adjectives)). Doublet of pomade, pomate, and pomatum. Sense 1.1 (“crushed apples”) and sense 1.2 (“residue from grapes”) were possibly influenced by Middle French pommage (“(cidermaking) apple harvest; apple orchards”) and French poma, pomas, pomat (“residue from apples”) (Northern France).

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes