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calabash
[kal-uh-bash]
noun
any of various gourds, especially the bottle gourd, Lagenaria siceraria.
a tropical American tree, Crescentia cujete, of the bignonia family, bearing large, gourdlike fruit.
any of several other plants having gourdlike fruit.
the fruit of any of these plants.
the dried, hollowed-out shell of any of these fruits, used as a container or utensil.
a bottle, kettle, ladle, etc., made from such a shell.
a tobacco pipe with a large bowl made from a calabash and usually having a curved stem.
a gourd used as a rattle, drum, etc.
calabash
/ ˈæəˌæʃ /
noun
Also called: calabash tree.a tropical American evergreen tree, Crescentia cujete, that produces large round gourds: family Bignoniaceae
another name for the bottle gourd
the gourd of either of these plants
the dried hollow shell of a gourd used as the bowl of a tobacco pipe, a bottle, rattle, etc
a tropical African shrub, Monodora myristica, whose oily aromatic seeds can be used as nutmegs: family Annonaceae
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of calabash1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of calabash1
Example Sentences
Oloya also explores the theme of modernity in a series of different sized and shaped gourds, the woody fruit of the calabash trees.
He placed a pot of ground millet, a packet of snuff, cooking utensils, and a calabash of beer at the top.
With just two guitars, bass and calabash, the music is live, unadorned and pristinely recorded.
In one painting, a woman pours a liquid from a calabash, which is made up of pieces of brown 1,000 and 50 billion Zimbabwe dollar notes.
To start, she served a gazpacho made from chayote, the squash also known as christophine, in open calabash gourds, nestled on beds of rock salt.
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