Untitled
feel the O O
Someone loves a fence...
Autumn rain
Daffodils
Traveler of the ocean
Colour beyond the yard
A passage to Oceanic feeling
.....No answer came....!
Frond fans
Lovely day
Nandi Milk Franchise
Dinner Time
Pay heed.....
TV Dinner
A bed room in Paris
Spring in Frodsham
Bridge to Coconut Island
There was a Magnolia Tree....
Jain Basadi /Kara basadi/Basadi in the middle of a…
Last one ~ still standing
Man and the Mind......
A painter's view....
Autumn colour confusion
South Point, Hawaii
Sugar.....sugar...
Autumn Leaves
Samadhi Buddha
Steam from the depth of the land
Trees
Winter-walk
Nothing is tragic.....
^^
Become Ocean
Returning II W.W Sailor
Mahala for following the instruction
Rain
Rainy sky and a rose
Street Furniture music
Spring extravaganza
Dog wood tree
Location
Lat, Lng:
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See also...
Keywords
Mai'a, Musa, Banana / Plantain tree


What is the origin of ‘banana’?
Banana appears to be a tropical African word, but its lexical origins represent only a single stage in the fruit’s worldwide wanderings before it reached English.
Asian origins?
It probably first grew in Southeast Asia, and did not make a big impact elsewhere until the early Islamic period when it was brought from India to the Middle East, and thence to Africa. The odd banana had turned up in Europe before that, of course, but only as an exotic rarity: in ancient Rome, for instance, it had to make do with borrowing the name of the fig (a notion which lived on in the early French term for ‘banana’, figue du paradis). Spanish and Portuguese colonists took the banana with them across the Atlantic from Africa to the Americas, and along with it they brought its African name, banana, apparently a word from one of the languages of the Congo area (it has been speculated that it derives ultimately from Arabic banana ‘finger, toe’, an origin which would be echoed in the English term hand for a bunch of bananas, and serves as a reminder that many varieties of banana are quite small, not like the monstrous articles standardly imported into Britain).
The banana comes to Britain
The first banana to reach Britain came from Bermuda in 1633, and was sold in the shop of the herbalist Thomas Johnson, but its name had been known to the British (often in the form bonana or bonano, which in Spanish is strictly the term for the ‘banana tree’) for a good forty years before that. To begin with, bananas were generally not eaten raw, but cooked in tarts and dumplings.
Go Bananas!
The colloquial use of bananas for ‘mad, crazy’ is a surprisingly recent development. There is an isolated record of it from the US in the 1930s meaning ‘sexually perverted, degenerate’, but the current usage seems to have originated in US college slang of the mid to late 1960s. It is not clear how it arose. Some connection has been suggested with the earlier slang term banana oil ‘nonsense’, which dates from the 1920s, but since the origins of that too are unknown, the suggestion only pushes the mystery one stage
blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2014/08/01/origin-banana
Banana appears to be a tropical African word, but its lexical origins represent only a single stage in the fruit’s worldwide wanderings before it reached English.
Asian origins?
It probably first grew in Southeast Asia, and did not make a big impact elsewhere until the early Islamic period when it was brought from India to the Middle East, and thence to Africa. The odd banana had turned up in Europe before that, of course, but only as an exotic rarity: in ancient Rome, for instance, it had to make do with borrowing the name of the fig (a notion which lived on in the early French term for ‘banana’, figue du paradis). Spanish and Portuguese colonists took the banana with them across the Atlantic from Africa to the Americas, and along with it they brought its African name, banana, apparently a word from one of the languages of the Congo area (it has been speculated that it derives ultimately from Arabic banana ‘finger, toe’, an origin which would be echoed in the English term hand for a bunch of bananas, and serves as a reminder that many varieties of banana are quite small, not like the monstrous articles standardly imported into Britain).
The banana comes to Britain
The first banana to reach Britain came from Bermuda in 1633, and was sold in the shop of the herbalist Thomas Johnson, but its name had been known to the British (often in the form bonana or bonano, which in Spanish is strictly the term for the ‘banana tree’) for a good forty years before that. To begin with, bananas were generally not eaten raw, but cooked in tarts and dumplings.
Go Bananas!
The colloquial use of bananas for ‘mad, crazy’ is a surprisingly recent development. There is an isolated record of it from the US in the 1930s meaning ‘sexually perverted, degenerate’, but the current usage seems to have originated in US college slang of the mid to late 1960s. It is not clear how it arose. Some connection has been suggested with the earlier slang term banana oil ‘nonsense’, which dates from the 1920s, but since the origins of that too are unknown, the suggestion only pushes the mystery one stage
blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2014/08/01/origin-banana
Berny, have particularly liked this photo
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