different between yupon vs yaupon
yupon
English
Noun
yupon (countable and uncountable, plural yupons)
- (now uncommon) Alternative form of yaupon
yupon From the web:
- what does yupon mean
- yupon meaning
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)
- 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.
- 2002, Connie C. Barlow, The Ghosts of Evolution: Nonsensical Fruit, Missing Partners, and Other Ecological Anachronisms
- 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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