nance

See also: Nance and náncè

English

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Etymology 1

From nancy. As a verb, cf. prance, dance, and mince.

Noun

nance (plural nances)

  1. (slang) Alternative form of nancy (an effeminate male homosexual)
    • 1992, Leigh W. Rutledge, The gay decades: from Stonewall to the present:
      "Fairies, nances, swishes, fags, lezzes — call 'em what you please — should of course be permitted to earn honest livings []

Verb

nance (third-person singular simple present nances, present participle nancing, simple past and past participle nanced)

  1. (uncommon, slang) To move in a prissy or stereotypically effeminate manner.
    nancing around in tight pants

Further reading

  • nance”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.

Etymology 2

From Spanish nance.

Noun

nance (plural nances)

  1. A large shrub or small tree of subtropical and tropical areas of the Americas, Byrsonima crassifolia, bearing a small, sweet, yellow fruit.

Anagrams

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Classical Nahuatl nantzi.

Noun

nance m (plural nances)

  1. a fruit tree of the species Byrsonima crassifolia in the acerola family
  2. the fruit of this tree
  3. a kind of coffee grown in Costa Rica

Further reading

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