apricot
English

Apricot fruits
Etymology
Alteration of apricock (with influence from French abricot), itself an alteration of abrecock (with influence from Latin apricum (“sunny place”)), from dialectal Catalan abrecoc, abricoc, variants of standard albercoc, from Arabic الْبَرْقُوق (al-barqūq, “plums”), from Byzantine Greek βερικοκκία (berikokkía, “apricot tree”), from Ancient Greek πραικόκιον (praikókion), from Late Latin (persica) praecocia (literally “(peaches) which ripen early”), (mālum) praecoquum (literally “(apple) which ripens early”). Doublet of precocious.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈeɪ.pɹɪ.kɒt/
Audio (UK) (file)
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈeɪ.pɹɪ.kɑt/, /ˈæp.ɹɪ.kɑt/
Audio (US) (file) Audio (US) (file)
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /æepɹɪˈkɒt/, /æepɹɪˈkɔt/
Audio (AU) (file)
- Hyphenation: apri‧cot
Noun
apricot (countable and uncountable, plural apricots)
- A round sweet and juicy stone fruit, resembling peach or plum in taste, with a yellow-orange flesh, lightly fuzzy skin and a large seed inside.
- pickled apricots
- The apricot tree, Prunus armeniaca
- A pale yellow-orange colour, like that of an apricot fruit.
- apricot:
- A dog with an orange-coloured coat.
- (sniper slang) The junction of the brain and brain stem on a target, used as an aiming point to ensure a one-shot kill.
- 2011, Jordan Gray, Unearthed, Harlequin, →ISBN, page 41:
- Seven hundred and seventy-eight yards, though I didn't know the exact measurement at the time, plus the fact that the bullet ripped through the victim's apricot tipped me to the fact that we were probably dealing with an experienced sniper.
- 2012, Eric Puchner, “Beautiful Monsters”, in Tom Perrotta, editor, The Best American Short Stories 2012, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, →ISBN, page 198:
- I'd aim right for the apricot. The medulla. You'd die instantly.
- 2020, Elise Noble, When the Shadows Fall, Undercover Publishing Limited, →ISBN:
- “See the nose?” Slater asked. He’d drawn a face on the watermelon with a Sharpie. “Aim right below it, at the philtrum. That way, the bullet's gonna go straight through and hit the apricot. Carmen told you about the apricot?”
In my first lesson. The apricot was the sniper's nickname for the medulla oblongata, the cone-shaped mass of neurons that connected the brain to the spinal cord.
- (slang, Australia, dated, usually in the plural) A testicle.
Hypernyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
fruit
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tree
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colour
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Adjective
apricot (comparative more apricot, superlative most apricot)
- Of a pale yellowish-orange colour, like that of an apricot.
Translations
colour
See also
- lekvar
- Appendix:Colors
Further reading
apricot on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Prunus armeniaca on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
Prunus armeniaca on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “apricot”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
German
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /apʁiˈkoː/
Audio (file)
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