tansy

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A herbaceous plant with yellow flowers, of the genus Tanacetum, especially Tanacetum vulgare.
  2. A dish common in the seventeenth century, made of eggs, sugar, rose water, cream, and the juice of herbs (including tansy), baked with butter in a shallow dish. "Originally flavoured with tansy, but by Pepys's time generally having spinach as its predominant flavouring."
name
  1. A female given name from English.

Pronunciation

/ˈtanzi/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-tansy.wav /ˈtæn.zi/ /ˈtænzi/

Word forms

tansy tansies

Etymology

Inherited from Middle English tansy, tansey, syncopic forms of earlier tanesie, tanesei, from Old French tanesie, tanoisie, tanasie, tanaisie, from Medieval Latin tanacetum, atanacetum, attested since the 8th century, of obscure origin, speculated from Ancient Greek ἀθανασία (athanasía, “immortality”) owing to hallucinations from the thujone in the plant, else from taenia (“tapeworm”) due to its primary use against parasites by which reason it is called in Arabic حَشِيشَة الدُود (ḥašīša ad-dūd, literally “worm herb”), otherwise a Berber borrowing like tagetes.

Related words

Derived words

bushy seaside tansy camphor dune tansy common tansy double tansy goose tansy northern dune tansy sheep tansy tansyaster tansy mustard tansy ragwort white tansy wild tansy
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