beer nut
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Possibly from the US trademark Beer Nuts (named for their intended use as a snack with beer), though the US brand is not sold in Australia.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]- (Australia) A peanut served with its husk (but not its shell).
- 1984, Steve Katz, Mongolian Whiskey: Stolen Stories, page 37:
- Stanley crumbled the husk of a beer nut between his thumb and middle finger.
- 2006, Robin McGraw, Inside My Heart: Choosing to Live with Passion and Purpose[1], page 28:
- For instance, there's Phillip's opinion of chocolate: to him, it's just another snack—like beer nuts or a piece of fruit.
- 2008, Tim Schenck, What Size are God's Shoes?: Kids, Chaos, and the Spiritual Life[2], page 37:
- At the end of the party, the parents of the birthday boy handed me a party bag and my prize: a bag of beer nuts. I've since wondered what kind of parent would possibly give an eight-year-old beer nuts, but whatever. It was the seventies.
Translations
[edit]peanut served with its husk
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