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agave

noun

aga·​ve ə-ˈgä-vē How to pronounce agave (audio)
: any of a genus (Agave of the family Agavaceae, the agave family) of plants having spiny-margined leaves and flowers in tall spreading panicles and including some cultivated for their fiber or sap or for ornament

Illustration of agave

Illustration of agave

Example Sentences

Recent Examples on the Web Most likely your agave is the sensational century plant that grows a flower stalk to twenty feet high. Tom Maccubbin, Orlando Sentinel, 10 Sep. 2022 For those looking for cocktails, the restaurant offers the El Matador, made with añejo tequila, elderflower liqueur, ginger agave and a dash of orange bitters. William Thornton | Wthornton@al.com, al, 7 Sep. 2022 To this end, Enemigo does not use fossil fuels and recycles any leftover agave to power their ovens. Bridget Arsenault, Forbes, 14 Aug. 2022 The cooked agave notes really shine through on the palate, with a bit of citrus, vanilla and baking spice as well. Jonah Flicker, Robb Report, 2 Aug. 2022 Blanco tequila is not typically aged -- it is meant to express a more unadulterated form of the agave flavors and is sometimes let to stand in a steel tank. Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY, 22 July 2022 Fewer agave means fewer bats—and so the cacti suffer, too. Samanth Subramanian, Quartz, 3 May 2022 Ghost Donkey, a world-renowned bar with locations in Las Vegas, Denver and New Zealand, recently opened in downtown Phoenix, bringing with it a menu of mezcal, bacanora, sotol and other hard-to-find agave varietals. Tirion Morris, The Arizona Republic, 15 Apr. 2022 Farmers in Northern California are even growing the drought-resistant plant agave, traditionally grown in Mexico. Greg Cannella, CBS News, 27 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

borrowed from New Latin, borrowed from Greek agauḗ, feminine of agauós "admirable, illustrious, brilliant," of uncertain origin

Note: First distinguished as a genus separate from aloe by Linnaeus in Hortus Upsaliensis v. 1 (Stockholm, 1748), p. 87-88: "The African and Asian [species of aloe], naturally of pharmacological use and known for a longer time, would retain their everyday pharmacological name; another name should be conferred on these [species of Agave], and since among the synonyms nothing worthy presents itself, and an ancient name may be applied to an ancient genus, thereby I have called it Agave as it is an admirable plant" ("Africanae & Asiaticae utpote officinales, diutius notae retineant nomen officinale & usitatissimum; aliud his imponatur, inter synonyma nullum dignum occur[r]it, licet antiquo generi antiquum nomen competeret, ideoque dixi Agave quasi plantam admirabilem."). The non-Latinization of final eta may have been motivated by the various mythological personages named Agave in Latin versions of Greek tales. The etymology of Greek agauós is uncertain; a connection with agánai/ágamai, "wonder at, admire," is plausible semantically, but the internal upsilon seems justified neither by the root nor by ordinary derivation.

First Known Use

1760, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of agave was in 1760

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