: a pear with firm flesh and brown or dark yellow skin

Examples of Bosc in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
These examples are automatically compiled from online sources to illustrate current usage. Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Sherwin-Williams’ 2025 Color Capsule of the Year includes both rich golden yellow, Bosc Pear (SW-6390), and more vibrant yet cozy yellow-green: Chartreuse (SW-0073). Cameron Beall, Southern Living, 26 Oct. 2024 Similarly, Bosc Pear ripens up a dusty tone with something a bit yellowish-golden. Tim Nelson, Architectural Digest, 17 Oct. 2024 The capsule includes Warm Stone, Persimmon, Borscht, Bosc Pear, French Roast, Oyster White, Tres Naturale, Upward, Outerspace, Chartreuse, Green Bray, and Gallery Green. Christianna Silva, Better Homes & Gardens, 31 July 2024 Aurélien Bosc, chairman of Pathé Cinemas, also welcomed expanding his company’s partnership with Imax. Etan Vlessing, The Hollywood Reporter, 27 Nov. 2023 Unorthodox Chenin Blanc 2022 (2.5 stars) Coastal Region, South Africa, $21 Flavors of Granny Smith apple, Bosc pear and sage highlight this light-bodied, refreshing wine that partners well with salads and lighter seafood dishes. Dave McIntyre, Washington Post, 25 Nov. 2023 Tart McIntosh apples meld with sweet Bosc pears in this all-purpose condiment. Matt Brooks, Washington Post, 26 Oct. 2023

Word History

Etymology

short for Beurré Bosc, borrowed from French, from beurré, any of various soft-fleshed pear varieties (literally, "buttered," from past participle of beurrer "to spread with butter," verbal derivative of beurre "butter") + Bosc, from Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc d'Antic †1828 French naturalist

Note: The name Le Beurré Bosc appears in a list of pears in the Dictionnaire de la culture et de l'aménagement des forets, by Jacques Joseph Baudrillart and Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc (Paris, 1821), vol. 7 of the Encyclopédie méthodique—Agriculture; its cultivation is attributed to the Belgian chemist and horticulturist Jean-Baptiste van Mons (1765-1842). This is very likely the Bosc pear ("La Poire Bosc") described by van Mons in an article in Annales générales des sciences physiques (Brussels), vol. 2 (1819), pp. 65-67: "Cette belle poire rentre dans la variété dite Calebasse, et dans les Beurrées: l'excellence de ses qualités nous a déterminés à lui donner un nom célèbre à plusieurs titres dan les sciences, et nous ne pouvions choisir, pour la lui dédier, un savant plus respectable que M. Bosc, l'ami des trois rédacteurs des Annales générales" ("This handsome pear fits into the varieties called Calebasse ["gourd, calabash"] and Beurrées: the superiority of its qualities resolves us to give to it a name renowned in several scientific fields, and we could not choose, for a dedicatee, a scholar more esteemed than M. Bosc, the friend of the three editors of the Annales générales"). The tale does not end here, however. According to Eugène Forney (Le jardin fruitier, vol. 1, Paris, 1862, pp. 201-02), there were two pears named Beurré Bosc, a supposedly inferior calebasse pear introduced by van Mons, and another that originated in Apremont, Haute-Saône département and was sent to the Jardin des Plantes in Paris by a monsieur Madiot, director of the Rhône département nursery sometime before 1835. The latter variety was "dedicated to Bosc, the former director of that garden [the Jardin des Plantes], a distinguished pomologist, who, in 1793, at the end of his banishment, had saved from destruction the ancient fruit tree nursery of the Carthusians and assembled the vine collection of the Luxembourg [garden]" ("l'arbre fut dédié à Bosc, ancien directeur de ce jardin, pomologiste distingué qui, en 93, au sortir de la proscription, avait sauvé de la destruction l'ancienne école des arbres fruitiers des Chartreux et réuni la collection des vignes du Luxembourg"). Presumably the modern Bosc pear, which is not gourd-shaped, bears more resemblance to the later variety than to van Mons' pear.

First Known Use

1850, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of Bosc was in 1850

Dictionary Entries Near Bosc

Cite this Entry

“Bosc.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Bosc. Accessed 15 Nov. 2024.

Last Updated: - Updated example sentences
Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!