English edit

 
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Etymology edit

From Canadian French tamarac, believed to derive from an Algonquian word.[1]

In European languages there was contamination between tacamahac, from Nahuatl, and various Algonquian words containing the final Proto-Algonquian *-a·xkw- (hardwood or deciduous tree), including the sources of tamarack and hackmatack,[2] as was already recognized by Chamberlain 1902.[3] This makes the precise Algonquian words involved difficult to recover.

Noun edit

tamarack (countable and uncountable, plural tamaracks)

  1. Any of several North American larches, of the genus Larix.
    • 2005, Joseph Boyden, Three Day Road, Penguin, published 2008, page 36:
      The women peeled tamarack bark for tea, dug through the deep snow in hopes of finding a few dried fiddleheads.
    • 2012, Stephen King, 11/22/63, page 116:
      The motor court was set back from the highway and shaded not by tamaracks but by huge stately elms.
  2. The wood from such a tree.

Synonyms edit

References edit

  1. ^ tamarack”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  2. ^ hackmatack, n.”, in OED Online  , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, September 2023.
  3. ^ Chamberlain, Alexander F. (1902 October–December) “Algonkian Words in American English: A Study in the Contact of the White Man and The Indian”, in The Journal of American Folk-Lore[1], volume XV, number LIX, American Folk-Lore Society, →DOI, page 260