punnet

Etymology

Uncertain. First appears in the 1820s. Perhaps a diminutive of pun, a dialect variant of pound, the weight + -et. The suggestion that it is an eponym of Reginald Crundall Punnett (1875–1967), geneticist and grower of strawberries, is not chronologically possible. The suggestion it was an ancestor of his lacks evidence.

noun

  1. (UK, Australia, New Zealand) A small basket or receptacle for collecting and selling fruit, particularly strawberries.
    Thus, according to the same Year-Book, a sea-kale punnet measures 8 in. in diameter at the top and 7½ in. at the bottom, being 2 in. deep, while a radish punnet is 8 in. in diameter and 1 in. deep, if to hold six “hands,” or 9 in. by 1 in. for twelve “hands.” A mushroom punnet is 7 in. by 1 in., while a salading punnet is 5 in. by 2 in. 1904, Arthur George Liddon Rogers, The Business Side of Agriculture, 2010, Forgotten Books, page 85
    Another type of splint basket, called a punnet, was used in the strawberry trade of New York City between 1815 and 1850.[…]Punnets and pottles found little favor except in the vicinity of Boston and New York and were soon discarded for more convenient and less expensive packages. 1917, Stevenson Whitcomb Fletcher, The Strawberry in North America: History, Origin, Botany, and Breeding, pages 77–78
    Most of the fruit for market is picked and sold in punnets, but for jam making buckets are used, similar to the raspberry bucket. 1933, South Australian Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Journal of Agriculture, South Australia, Volume 36, page 1292
    Early this season, Ross Lill got together with a plastics firm to produce a flat tray to replace the commonly used punnet. 1982, New Zealand Department of Agriculture, New Zealand journal of agriculture, page 13
    However we recommend, particularly in cooler climates, sowing tomato seeds into a seed tray or punnet and allowing the seedlings to grow before they are transplanted into the garden. 2005, Don Burke, The Complete Burke's Backyard: The Ultimate Book of Fact Sheets, page 408
    ‘But rather than spend £5 on a small punnet of exotic berries, a family would be better off buying regular and larger quantities of fresh fruit and vegetables from their local market.[…]’ May 13 2007, Amelia Hill, “Forget superfoods, you can′t beat an apple a day”, in The Guardian

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