kukui
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kuˈku.i/
Noun
kukui (plural kukuis)
- (Hawaii) Aleurites moluccana, the candlenut tree.
- 2004 October 17, Garrett Hongo, “Poke”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- Though I'd often eaten sashimi, poke was then completely new to me—delicious rubies of cubed fish dressed in light sesame oil, garnished with minced bits of reddish-brown seaweed and the ground centers of kukui nuts (see recipe, next page).
- 2012, Julia Flynn Siler, Lost Kingdom, Grove Press, page 43:
- Passing through a grove of kukui trees, with their silver-gray leaves, and then through a valley, they would have reached sugarcane fields, their stalks as tall as a man and densely clumped together.
Hawaiian
Etymology
From Proto-Oceanic *tuRi-tuRi (cognate with Tongan tuitui and Fijian tuitui). Sense of light comes from the nut's oily properties sought after as a source of fuel for torches.
References
- Pukui, Mary Kawena, Elbert, Samuel H. (1986) “kukui”, in Hawaiian Dictionary, revised & enlarged edition, Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, →ISBN, pages 177-8
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