bananaphile

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See also: banana-phile

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From banana +‎ -phile.

Noun

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bananaphile (plural bananaphiles)

  1. One who loves bananas.
    • 1967, Moishe Nadir, “The Eatabananists”, in Max Rosenfeld, editor, A Union for Shabbos, and Other Stories of Jewish Life in America, Philadelphia, Pa.: Sholom Aleichem Club Press, page 187:
      Our bananaphiles meanwhile were raising a furor in the newspapers. Why weren’t people eating more bananas? Why weren’t the sick people in the hospitals given bananas to eat instead of questionable eggs and so forth?
    • 1970 November, World Coins, page 1384:
      Turn page upside down, notice legends on banana cloth wrapping. “Bananaphiles” may have a new collecting interest.
    • 1975 April 4, “Banana Trade Slips Away”, in Spokane Daily Chronicle, 89th year, number 165, Spokane, Wash., page 4:
      Within the memory of many an old bananaphile are the days of loss-leader sales in chain stores of bananas, three pounds for a dime.
    • 1977 November 6, Chicago Tribune, 131st year, number 310, section 6, page 23:
      Tarzan’s dead but Jane’s still swinging. Bananaphiles enjoy a wild look at old age.
    • 1979 June 3, Michael E. Kampen, “The Banal Banana Finds Its Place In The Arts”, in The Charlotte Observer, 94th year, number 143, page 9F:
      There are other bona fide bananaphiles in Charlotte — most of the people attending the reception for her show on May 20 enjoying liquid banana surprises had already “gone bananas.”
    • 1984 July 8, Malcolm R. Hebert, “Getting Serious About Bananas”, in Sunshine, page 20:
      There are three stages of ripeness. The first is the banana with a touch of green; the second is light yellow; and the third is yellow with dark-brown flecks on it. Most people prefer the first two stages, but bananaphiles know that the brown-flecked is the sweetest.
    • 1994, Gordon C. Graham, As I Was Saying: Essays on the International Book Business, Hans Zell Publishers, →ISBN, page 53:
      Of all consumer goods sold from one country to another, only books are expected by their purchasers to bear local prices with a public relationship to those in the countries of origin. No-one who buys a Volkswagen in Australia bothers to learn what the price is in Germany. British bananaphiles do not seek to know the price of their favourite fruit in the Canary Islands.
    • 1994 July 25, James Cockington, “Bananas in the raw”, in The Sydney Morning Herald, number 48,951, page 3s:
      Older bananaphiles may be interested to know that, inside the pyjamas marked B2 hides someone who resembles Hugh Grant.
    • 1999 March 1, The Sydney Morning Herald[1], number 50,387:
      Today is the birthday of bananaphile Harry Belafonte (1927), generational stutterer Roger Daltrey (1944) and cunning ham Ron Howard (1954).
    • 2000 September/October, Islands, page 26:
      To test the claims of bananaphiles, who say that each type – from Brazilian dwarf to praying hands – has a distinct flavor, guests taste the fruit as carefully as they would wine.
    • 2003, W. Park Kerr, Viva Margarita: Fabulous Fiestas in a Glass, Munchies, and More, Chronicle Books, →ISBN, page 70:
      Whether you’re a big bananaphile or not, you’ll dig this drink—Iguanabanana, baby!
    • 2011, John Oldale, “Panama”, in Who, or Why, or Which, or What …?: A Global Gazetteer of the Instructive and Strange, Particular Books, →ISBN, page 200:
      But, as all true bananaphiles agree, in size, handling, aroma and above all flavour, the Cavendish is a shadow of the glorious fruit that was once ‘Big Mike’.
    • 2011 February/March, Fine Cooking, number 109, The Taunton Press, Inc., →ISSN, page 71:
      Supermarkets are dominated by a single variety, the yellow, mildly sweet Cavendish. But bananaphiles can take heart: Major companies like Dole and Chiquita are brining more varieties to grocery stores.
    • 2014, Jeff Rovin, To Kill a Matzo Ball, Kensington Books, →ISBN, page 109:
      Technically, I was a former-New-York-woman-Jew-thirtysomething-divorcée-restaurateur-bananaphile.
    • 2018, Christopher Woods, “Quinta da Granja”, in Gardenlust: A Botanical Tour of the World’s Best New Gardens, Portland, Or.: Timber Press, →ISBN, page 145:
      Lest he be typecast as a bananaphile, he’s rather fond of palm trees too.
    • 2018, Michael Haworth, Neurotechnology and the End of Finitude, University of Minnesota Press, →ISBN:
      But there is nothing in the taste of bananas that I am missing, nothing that my bananaphile friend is privy to that I am not. It is simply that we have different taste response characteristics to one and the same stimulus.