pecan

listen to the pronunciation of pecan
İngilizce - Türkçe
bir tür ceviz
Güney Amerikaya mahsus ve cevize benzer bir ağaç, (bot.) Carya illinoensis.2. Bu ağacın meyvası
{i} pekan
pekan cevizi
fındık
peka
pecan pie
pekan tartı
İngilizce - İngilizce
A deciduous tree Carya illinoinensis of the central and southern United States, having deeply furrowed bark, pinnately compound leaves, and edible nuts
The smooth, thin-shelled oval nut of this tree
Pecans or pecan nuts are nuts with a thin, smooth shell that grow on trees in the southern United States and central America and that you can eat. a long thin sweet nut with a dark red shell, or the tree that it grows on (pacane, from an language). Nut and tree (Carya illinoinensis) of the walnut family, native to temperate North America. Occasionally reaching a height of about 160 ft (50 m), the tree has deeply furrowed bark and feather-shaped leaves. Pecan nut meat, rich and distinctive in flavour and texture, has one of the highest fat contents of any vegetable product and a caloric value close to that of butter. Pecan production is a considerable industry of the southeastern U.S., where pecan pie and pecan praline candy are traditional sweets
smooth brown oval nut of south central United States
tree of southern United States and Mexico cultivated for its nuts
A species of hickory (Carya olivæformis), growing in North America, chiefly in the Mississippi valley and in Texas, where it is one of the largest of forest trees; also, its fruit, a smooth, oblong nut, an inch or an inch and a half long, with a thin shell and well-flavored meat
wood of a pecan tree
{i} type of nut; hickory tree
smooth brown oval nut of south central United States tree of southern United States and Mexico cultivated for its nuts wood of a pecan tree
pecan pie
pie made of pecans and sugar and corn syrup and butter and eggs
pecan

    Heceleme

    pe·can

    Türkçe nasıl söylenir

    pıkän

    Telaffuz

    /pəˈkän/ /pəˈkɑːn/

    Etimoloji

    [ pi-kän, -kan; pE-"kan ] (noun.) 1772. From French pacane, from Miami pakani. Compare Cree pakan (“hard nut”), Ojibwa bagaan, Abenaki pagann.