English for Beginners Practical English Travel English Telephone English Banking English Accounting English Dictionary
Online English learning Courses
    courses   dictionary
Double-click any word on the page to look it up in the dictionary.

Audio English.net » Dictionary » A » Airiness ... Akko

AKEE

 Dictionary entry overview: What does akee mean? 

AKEE (noun)
  The noun AKEE has 2 senses:

1. widely cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions for its fragrant flowers and colorful fruits; introduced in Jamaica by William Bligh
2. red pear-shaped tropical fruit with poisonous seeds; flesh is poisonous when unripe or overripe

  Familiarity information: AKEE used as a noun is rare.


 Dictionary entry details 


AKEE (noun)


Sense 1akee [BACK TO TOP]

Meaning:

Widely cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions for its fragrant flowers and colorful fruits; introduced in Jamaica by William Bligh

Classified under:

Nouns denoting plants

Synonyms:

akee; akee tree; Blighia sapida

Hypernyms ("akee" is a kind of...):

fruit tree (tree bearing edible fruit)

Meronyms (parts of "akee"):

ackee; akee (red pear-shaped tropical fruit with poisonous seeds; flesh is poisonous when unripe or overripe)

Holonyms ("akee" is a member of...):

Blighia; genus Blighia (small genus of western African evergreen trees and shrubs bearing fleshy capsular three-seeded fruits edible when neither unripe nor overripe)


Sense 2akee [BACK TO TOP]

Meaning:

Red pear-shaped tropical fruit with poisonous seeds; flesh is poisonous when unripe or overripe

Classified under:

Nouns denoting foods and drinks

Synonyms:

ackee; akee

Hypernyms ("akee" is a kind of...):

edible fruit (edible reproductive body of a seed plant especially one having sweet flesh)

Holonyms ("akee" is a part of...):

akee; akee tree; Blighia sapida (widely cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions for its fragrant flowers and colorful fruits; introduced in Jamaica by William Bligh)


 Learn English with... Proverbs of the week 
"Great minds think alike, but fools seldom differ." (English proverb)

"There are many good moccasin tracks along the trail of a straight arrow." (Native American proverb, Sioux)

"He sold his vinyard and bought a squeezer." (Arabic proverb)

"Dogs don't eat dogs." (Czech proverb)

 AKEE: related words searches 

Page delivered in 0.0347 seconds




AudioEnglish Definitions... Just One Click Away!
Now you can lookup any word in our dictionary, right from the search box in your browser! Click here to add the AudioEnglish.net dictionary to your list of search providers.

Dictionary: go up
Dictionary: go down


 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Other popular searches:






Add to favorites