Sago in English, pronounced English [?se?ɡ?]; American [?se?ɡo?].
sago: noun, denoting sago rice, sago. It can also mean plant sago coconut, sago coconut. It can also be used as a personal name.
Sago is of Malay origin. Portuguese was responsible for introducing the Malay sāgū as sagu into English. The modern form sago, established in the 17th and 18th centuries, came through Dutch.
Example sentences:
1. Any?of?various?tropical?Asian?palm?trees?the?trunks?of?whichyield?sago.?
Any of various tropical Asian palms whose trunks yield sago rice.
2. Some people consume corn, cassava, sago or sweet potato as staple food.
Expanded:
In the 1570s, the name was obtained from Malay sagu by the Portuguese and the Dutch using the term "starch made from palm stems" (attested in English in this sense from the 1550s). Also borrowed from French (sagou), Spanish (sagu), German (Sago).
Common Vocabulary Collocations
1, Iron Tree: sago cycad
Example: Here sago cycas trees blossom once every year.
Here, the iron tree blossoms once a year.
2. Sago coconut: sago palm
Example: Pouring water over the sago pulp causes the plant starch to drain from the mash, and the starch will be dried into flour.
Pouring water over the sago pulp causes the plant starch to drain from the mash, and the starch will be dried into flour.
3, sago flour: sago flour
Example: The baker emptied several bags of sago?flour into a bin.
The baker emptied several bags of sago flour into the storage bin.