different between yapan vs yaupon

yapan

English

Noun

yapan

  1. (now less common than "yaupon") Alternative form of yaupon

Anagrams

  • Panay, Payan, panya

Azerbaijani

Participle

yapan

  1. subject non-past participle of yapmaq

Spanish

Verb

yapan

  1. Second-person plural (ustedes) present indicative form of yapar.
  2. Third-person plural (ellos, ellas, also used with ustedes?) present indicative form of yapar.

yapan From the web:

  • yapana basti
  • yapam in english


yaupon

English

Alternative forms

  • yapan, yopon, youpon, yupon (less common)
  • yawpan, yaupan (largely obsolete)

Etymology

From a Catawba word, most likely yap, yop, y? (tree), with the second element being either a diminutive suffix or p? (leaf) (resulting in the compound y?p?); alternatively, perhaps directly from a longer form of the word for leaf, 'yap'hâ.

Noun

yaupon (countable and uncountable, plural yaupons)

  1. The yaupon holly, Ilex vomitoria, an evergreen holly shrub with white flowers and red or yellow berries, found in the south-eastern United States.
    • 2002, Connie C. Barlow, The Ghosts of Evolution: Nonsensical Fruit, Missing Partners, and Other Ecological Anachronisms
      Yaupon is evergreen like the American holly and the familiar hollies of Christmas decorations, but the leaves of yaupon are small and smooth-edged rather than prickly. Easy to chew and blandly tasty, they would not stand out in a tossed salad.
  2. A tea-like drink, "black drink", brewed from the leaves of this holly (or, sometimes, Ilex cassine).

See also

  • cassina
  • black drink

References

Anagrams

  • Pouyan

yaupon From the web:

  • what is yaupon tea
  • what is yaupon tea good for
  • what kills yaupon
  • what is yaupon holly
  • what does yaupon holly look like
  • what does yaupon taste like
  • what does yaupon mean
  • what does yaupon look like
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