English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English walsh-note, from Old English wealhhnutu (walnut, literally Welsh-nut), equivalent to Welsh +‎ nut.

Noun edit

welshnut (plural welshnuts)

  1. (UK dialects, West Country, Dorset, Somerset, dated) A walnut (nut or tree).
    • 1879, William Barnes, “The Welshnut Tree”, in Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect, page 85:
      [] Our tongues do run, O, / Enough to stun, O, / Your head wi' glee by the welshnut tree.
    • 1912, Country Life, volume 31, page 313:
      A wife, a whelp and a Welshnut tree / The more you beat 'em, the better they be.