The answer comes from Latin, where "dicti" means "word." Today, to learn the meaning and history of a "dicti," a dictionary is most helpful!
If you find "avocado" in your dictionary, you probably will read at the end of its definitions something close to: "From Mexican-Spanish term "aguacate," meaning "water cactus."
A native dialect has the same word, from which came "guacamole," a very popular dip that was called "avocado sauce."
(NOTE: The same native dialect also defines an "aguacate" as a "testicle." Enjoy your next Mexican meal!)
It is Mexican/Spanish 'Ahuacatl' in Mexican which became 'aguacate' in Spanish meaning Alligator pear
WORD HISTORY: The etymology of avocado takes us back to the Incas and Aztecs of Central America who spoke Nahuatl,a native language in antiquity which contained the word ahuacatlmeaning both: fruit of the avocado tree and testicle. The word ahuacatl was compounded with others, as in ahuacamolli, meaning avocado soup or sauce, from which the Spanish-Mexican word guacamole derives. In trying to pronounce ahuacatl, the Spanish conquistadores who found the fruit and its Nahuatl name in Mexico came up with aguacate, but other Spanish speakers substituted the form avocado for the Nahuatl word because ahuacatl sounded like the early Spanish word avocado (now abogado), meaning lawyer. In borrowing the Spanish avocado,first recorded in English in 1697 in the compound avogato pear (with a spelling that probably reflects Spanish pronunciation), we have lost some traces of the more interesting Nahuatl word.
The tree is a native of Mexico, from the State of Puebla. The name is Spanish
The African Luhya word for the English word "avocado" is "liavakadoo".
Avocado in English translates to aguacate (m) and palta (f) in Spanish.
Avocado in hindi means 'makhan phal'.The Telugu word for Avocado is 'venna pandu'.
In Kannada, Avocado is called Benne-Hannu.
Many words in English have a root word in Latin or Greek. This is not the case for avocado. The word reportedly comes from the Nahuatl (Aztec) word "ahuacatl" or testicle (due to the shape of the fruit). This would be the root word for the English word avocado.
The word "avocado" in Hindi is मगरनेफल (magarnefal).
A couple of words that rhyme with "desperado" include avocado and tornado.
it's the same word: die Avocado [stress on the a vowels AH-vo-cAdo]
parachichi