: a Eurasian biennial herb (Pastinaca sativa) of the carrot family with large pinnate leaves and yellow flowers that is cultivated for its long tapered whitish root which is cooked as a vegetable
also: the root
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The word parsnip was borrowed into Middle English in the 14th century as a modification of the Old French word pasnaie, itself derived from the Latin noun pastinaca, meaning "parsnip" or "carrot." The scientific name for the parsnip, "Pastinaca sativa," still reflects this history. "Pastinaca," in turn, traces back to "pastinum," a Latin word for a small gardening tool used to make holes in the ground for the insertion of plants, seeds, or bulbs. "Parsnip" may also remind you of the name of another edible root, "turnip," and there's a possible explanation for the resemblance. The Middle English spelling of "parsnip" ("passenep") may have been influenced by "nepe," the old form of "turnip."
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The long tap root can be eaten raw in salads or boiled and eaten like parsnips.—Mary Marlowe Leverette, Southern Living, 27 Apr. 2025 Examples of starchy vegetables include potatoes, corn, lentils, peas, beans, pumpkin, and parsnips.—Lindsey Desoto, Health, 24 Apr. 2025 The Brown Butter Farro & Roasted Root Vegetables rounds out the options with hearty carrots, parsnips, and baby potatoes mixed through nutty farro, unified by the brown butter's subtle richness.—Nasha Smith, Forbes.com, 23 Apr. 2025 Root crops don’t transplant well, so directly seed carrots, beets, radishes, parsnips, etc.—Nan Sterman, San Diego Union-Tribune, 5 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for parsnip
Word History
Etymology
Middle English pasnepe, pastenepe, persnepe, borrowed (with assimilation of the final syllable to nepe "turnip") from Old French pasnaie, going back to Latin pastināca "carrot, turnip," probably from pastinum "two-pronged implement for planting seeds" (of uncertain origin) + -āca, suffix of plant names — more at neep
Note:
Forms with -r-, marginally attested before ca. 1500, are perhaps by hypercorrection, since r is sometimes lost before tautosyllabic s in popular speech (see note at hoss). — Ernout and Meillet (Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue française) compare pastinum with the verb pangere "to insert firmly, set in the ground" and related derivatives (see pact), though the formal path is unclear.
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