kudzu
English

Kudzu covering several trees in Atlanta in the United States.

lumps of kudzu powder
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Japanese 葛 (kuzu). The spelling kudzu (instead of kuzu) is due to historical transliteration methods of Japanese into English (compare adzuki).
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈkʊd.zuː/
Noun
kudzu (usually uncountable, plural kudzus)
- An Asian vine (several species in the genus Pueraria, but mostly Pueraria montans var. lobata, syn. Pueraria lobata in the US), grown as a root starch, and which is a notorious invasive weed in the United States.
- Synonyms: Japanese arrowroot, mile-a-minute
- (cooking, medicine) A starch extracted from the root that is used in traditional East Asian medicine and cuisine.
- Synonym: kudzu powder
- 2009, Annemarie Colbin, Whole-food Guide to Strong Bones, New Harbinger Publications, →ISBN, page 233:
- Kudzu, a starch extracted from the root of the kudzu plant, acts similarly to cornstarch or arrowroot but is preferable for bone health because it contains some calcium.
Usage notes
- The kudzu invasive in the US apparently includes natural hybrids of four species of Pueraria: Pueraria montana, Pueraria edulis, Pueraria phaseoloides, and Pueraria tuberosa
Derived terms
- kudzu bug
- kudzu powder
- kudzu tea
Translations
an Asian vine
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Further reading
kudzu on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
kudzu powder on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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