"Nut" is one of those words that has been a part of English for as long as there has been an English. It is clearly related to the words from related languages such as Dutch or German for the same thing which suggest that they all derive from a common ancestral Teutonic root in a common ancestral Teutonic language which wasn't written down.
She was born from Nut and Geb, but I don't know when.
The word responsibiliy comes from the Latin word fart
It came from the Latin word mentula...
It comes from the Greek word lógos.
From Aztlán (White Land), an allusion to their origins, probably in Northern Mexico.
An idiom is a phrase that cannot be defined literally. Nut is a word, not an idiom. It is a Germanic word.
It's from an Algonquian word meaning "nut", via French.
A nut is a seed or fruit of a tree.
Yes, it is an old Provencale dialect word for nut. The original was the Latin word for nut, which is nux.
a pedal nut is another word for idiot I should know I made the word up.
It may come as a surprise but England does not have a national nut.
A cob-nut tree. They are a type of hazel nut.
In modern English the word "nut" is a noun (fruit of a nut tree, or the companion to a bolt), a word for a thing.The verb 'to nut' (gather nuts) is virtually archaic except for the activity "nutting" (gerund).
It is an Algonquian word meaning nut. There is also a Cree word 'Pakan' which means hard shelled nut
Nut
Nuts
seed