: the fruit of an African tree (Blighia sapida) of the soapberry family grown in the Caribbean area, Florida, and Hawaii for its white or yellowish fleshy aril that is edible when ripe but is poisonous when immature or overripe and that has a toxic pink raphe attaching the aril to the seed
also: the tree
Example Sentences
Recent Examples on the WebThe menu features brown stew chicken, curry goat, oxtail, jerk shrimp salad and ackee with salt fish. Priscilla Totiyapungprasert, azcentral, 3 Feb. 2020 For comforting Jamaican staples, Public House is known for its ackee and saltfish. Kate Donnelly, Condé Nast Traveler, 3 Feb. 2020 Options may include curry chickpeas, jerk barbecue tofu and johnnycakes, as well as a rotating menu of Caribbean specials, such as a vegan take on sauteed ackee. Priscilla Totiyapungprasert, azcentral, 3 Dec. 2019 Examples include sauteed ackee, served with seaweed instead of saltfish, and ducana, sweet boiled dumplings derived from Antigua. Priscilla Totiyapungprasert, azcentral, 4 Nov. 2019 The inspector dropped a stop-sale on porridge, ackee, cooked banana and lettuce for being kept at an improper temperature. David J. Neal, miamiherald, 12 July 2018
Word History
Etymology
probably borrowed from a Twi word, or from a related loanword in another West African language
Note: G. A. Christaller, Dictionary of the Asante and Fante Language Called Tshi (Twi), 2nd edition (Basel, 1933), has the following entries: àŋkyẽ, áŋkyẽ "a kind of wild cashew tree; its fruits (they are eaten by the Krobos)"; akyẽ́à "cashew nut; Gã: atĩa." It is uncertain if Christaller's "wild cashew tree" should be equated with Blighia sapida, which does not have the cashew's distinctive drupe and accessory fruit. The etymology "Kru ā-kee," which appears in several dictionaries (as Cassidy and Le Page, Dictionary of Jamaican English, 2nd edition, Cambridge, 1980) is based ultimately on Merriam-Webster's second unabridged dictionary (Webster's New International of 1934). The Merriam-Webster files contain an unattributed note that is apparently the source of this etymology: "This seems to be the Kru word 'ā-kee' which is used for a tree yielding an excess of sap but its exact botanical name is not certain." Lorenzo Turner, the African etymologist for Merriam-Webster's 3rd unabridged dictionary (1961), retained the "Kru" etymology but noted that he could not confirm it. As Kru is now understood to be a family of more than twenty languages, its application here is not known.