from
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
litchi
n 1: Chinese tree cultivated especially in Philippines and India
for its edible fruit; sometimes placed in genus Nephelium
[syn: {litchi}, {lichee}, {litchi tree}, {Litchi
chinensis}, {Nephelium litchi}]
2: Chinese fruit having a thin brittle shell enclosing a sweet
jellylike pulp and a single seed; often dried [syn: {litchi},
{litchi nut}, {litchee}, {lichi}, {leechee}, {lichee},
{lychee}]
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Litchi \Li"tchi`\ (l[=e]"ch[=e]`), n. (Bot.)
The fruit of a tree native to China ({Nephelium Litchi}). It
is nutlike, having a rough but tender shell, containing an
aromatic pulp, and a single large seed. In the dried fruit
which is exported the pulp somewhat resembles a raisin in
color and form. [Written also {lichi}, and {lychee}.]
[1913 Webster]
2. (Bot.) A genus of East Indian sapindaceous trees
consisting of a single species ({Litchi Chinensis}, syn.
{Nephelium Litchi}) which bears the litchi nut.
[Webster 1913 Suppl.]