English edit

Etymology edit

Attested since about 1840 in American English, a modification of bagasse.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /məˈɡæs/, /məˈɡɑːs/

Noun edit

megass (uncountable)

  1. (archaic) Bagasse.
    • 1846, Simmonds Colonial Magazine and Foreign Miscellany (Peter Lund Simmonds, William Henry Giles Kingston), page 119:
      The megass was then gathered together, and suffered to steep in water so hot, that the hand can be borne in it without inconvenience, and after a while the megass was reground : the canes yielded two pans of liquor, and the megass one; []

References edit