Dictionary recognizes ‘Comhusker’ By Heather Heinisch Staff Reporter Last year, a cornhusker was just one who husks com or a social gath ering for husking com. Now a cornhusker officially will be recognized as a resident of Ne braska or the Nebraska athletic teams, according to the 1991 edition of the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Diction ary. Leslie Manganaro, a publicist for Merriam-Webster in Springfield, Mass., said words are added to the dictionary as they come into broad usage. Although editors tracked the first usage of comhusker to 1948, she said, it was not a widely known word out side the region. Nebraskans, however, were well aware of (he term coined at the begin ning of the century by Charles “Cy” Sherman, a sports editor at The Ne braska State Journal, in reference to the University of Nebraska’s athletic teams. *-'uii -- .«». r>»ui iiiuw lumi nuiu a [uiit.j wmammu corn*flow|er (-flouar) n. an annual plant (Centaurea cyanus) of the composite family, with tiny, raylike, white, pink or blue flowers forming a round head at the top of the stem. corndiusker (kom hus kar) n. 1 one who husks com 2 a social gathering for husking com. 3 a resident of Nebraska or the Nebraska athletic teams cor-nice (kor nis) n. [Fr