inajá

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From a native name, said by Century to be Tupian, probably via Portuguese inajá.

Noun[edit]

inajá (plural inajás)

  1. The South American palm tree Attalea maripa (syn. Maximiliana maripa, formerly also Maximiliana regia).
    • 1864, Sophy Moody, The Palm Tree, page 286:
      The great woody spathes of the Inajá Palm are used by hunters as cooking vessels for their meat; when filled with water they stand fire.
    • 1908, Richard Spruce, Notes of a Botanist on the Amazon & Andes: [] , page 362:
      The peak on the left has a broader top, and bears a good deal of forest, among which I thought I could distinguish two palms, probably Inajás, for my Indians found an Inajá palm growing at the highest point they attained, and [...]
    • 2014, Nigel Smith, Palms and People in the Amazon, Springer, →ISBN, page 93:
      Because the palm is so useful, the [natives] of the Fresco River, a tributary of the Xingu, set fires to encourage groves of inajá (Hecht 2003).
      Fig. 13.2 Inajá palms in a pasture invaded by weeds.

Anagrams[edit]