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acorn

[ey-kawrn, ey-kern]

noun

  1. the typically ovoid fruit or nut of an oak, enclosed at the base by a cupule.

  2. a finial or knop, as on a piece of furniture, in the form of an acorn.



acorn

/ ˈeɪkɔːn /

noun

  1. the fruit of an oak tree, consisting of a smooth thick-walled nut in a woody scaly cuplike base

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • acorned adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of acorn1

before 1000; Middle English acorne (influenced by corn 1 ), replacing akern, Old English æcern, æcren mast, oak-mast; cognate with Old Norse akarn fruit of wild trees, Middle High German ackeran acorn, Gothic akran fruit, yield < Germanic *akrana-; alleged derivation from base of acre is dubious if original reference was to wild trees
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Word History and Origins

Origin of acorn1

C16: a variant (through influence of corn ) of Old English æcern the fruit of a tree, acorn; related to Gothic akran fruit, yield
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Their leaves feed caterpillars, their bark shelters bats and beetles, and their acorns sustain mammals and birds through the winter.

From BBC

How much longer would the world have black Spanish pigs, fed nothing but acorns and chestnuts?

The upper world is inhabited by celestial Sky People, such as Sun and Sky Coyote, whose peón gambling games affected the seasons for everything from harvesting acorns to hunting game.

James Canton spent two years sitting beneath an 800-year-old oak tree near his home in Essex, watching acorns fatten and butterflies land on the massive knurled grey trunk.

From BBC

"It's one of the most iconic gastronomic products from Spain," he says, pointing out how the pigs used to make the ham are reared in the wild and fed on acorns.

From BBC

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Açôresacorn barnacle