cocal
English
Noun
cocal (plural cocals)
- A coconut grove or plantation.
- 1963, Ecology - Volume 44, page 614:
- Two lizards were found in 2 coconut palms a mile apart on the beach, in the middle of the afternoon of March 23. The tracks indicated that they had crawled out of the cocal, wandered around the beach a little, and then climbed the trees.
- 1969, Regina Evans Holloman, Developmental Change in San Blas, page 122:
- Since the average cocal (coconut plantation) has one hundred trees, this is an income of only $5 per year per plantation in badly blighted areas.
- 1985, Craig Lanier Dozier, Nicaragua's Mosquito Shore: The Years of British and American Presence:
- One immense cocal (coconut plantation), about 7 miles north of Greytown, constituting a strip about 20 miles along the Caribbean shore, was estimated to have thousands of trees.
- 1989, Emory King, The Little World of Danny Vasquez: Memoirs of Old San Pedro, page 95:
- One night a week Brother Jake divided the Scouts into two teams and took them to the Esmeralda cocal (coconut grove) just south of the village.
Romanian
Spanish
Further reading
- “cocal”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
Venetian
Alternative forms
- cocàłe, cocàło
Etymology
From Old Venetian crocal(e), borrowed from Byzantine Greek ὄρνις κροκάλης (órnis krokálēs, “bird of the sea-shore”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /koˈkal/
Derived terms
References
- Ferguson, Ronnie. 2007. A linguistic history of Venice. Florence: Olschki. Page 273.
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