: the nut of the oak usually seated in or surrounded by a hard woody cupule of indurated bracts
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Taking inspiration from her family's custom coat of arms, as well as the Cartier Halo tiara (the diadem Middleton paired with her stunning Alexander McQueen gown), the earrings feature acorn and oak leaf motifs.—Hannah Malach, InStyle, 21 Jan. 2026 The event, complete with interactive 3D stations, was set to include a performance by Evolve Altadena, and TreePeople giving out acorns.—Staff Report, Daily News, 12 Jan. 2026 Avoid curing acorn, delicata, or sweet dumpling squash, as this can actually shorten their shelf life.—Katie Rosenhouse, Southern Living, 4 Jan. 2026 The all-new Urbanoid Booba is an impossibly cute, tiny acorn of a trailer designed to provide a stylish, carefree way of instantly escaping the urban grind.—New Atlas, 30 Dec. 2025 See All Example Sentences for acorn
Word History
Etymology
Middle English akorn, akkorn (partially assimilated to corn "kernel, corn entry 1"), hakerne, accherne, accharne, going back to Old English æcern, going back to Germanic *akrana- (whence also Middle High German ackeran "tree nuts," Old Norse akarn, Gothic akran "fruit, produce"); akin to Old Irish írne "sloe, kernel," Welsh eirin "plums, sloes," aeron "fruits, berries," going back to Celtic *agrinyo-, *agranyo-; perhaps further akin to a Balto-Slavic word with an initial long vowel (Old Church Slavic agoda "fruit," Polish jagoda "berry," Lithuanian úoga)
Note:
Taken to be a derivative of Indo-European *h2eǵros "uncultivated field, pasture" (see acre), though this would seem to exclude the Balto-Slavic etymon, which lacks the suffix, from consideration. It is also not clear if fields, uncultivated or not, are the source of wild tree nuts.
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Time Traveler
The first known use of acorn was
before the 12th century