apple n
fruit with red or yellow or green skin and sweet to tart crisp whitish flesh
Any tree genus Pyrus which has the stalk sunken into the base of the fruit
as, an apple of gold
Origin of word apple
Example from the web for apple
I saw a lad trundling off the barrow of apples.
Why, the whole apple, damn them, and the devil take them all!
Now go round the table to the apple; look at the orange, and tell me to what part of the room the eye will be directed.
Top images related to apple
Words related to apple
Top words related to apple
Word scramble, anagrams of word apple
Dictionary Entries near apple
Lists containing apple
Trending words
word | Definition |
---|---|
zincite | Native zinc oxide |
concavely | in a concave way; «shaped concavely» |
one million million million | the number that is represented as a one followed by 18 zeros; «in England they call a quintillion a trillion» |
WP | |
accumulation | the act of accumulating |
Popular words
word | Definition |
---|---|
organism | organization |
professorships | |
foxhall | |
bigger | large or big relative to something else |
discompany | To free from company |
Word of the day
cover
maintain a check on; especially by patrolling; «The second officer covered the top floor»
Word lists, you might be interested in
list of oil vocabulary
list of quick vocabulary
list of sweat vocabulary
list of aboriginal vocabulary
list of pig vocabulary
list of time vocabulary
iWordBook
iWordBook.com is the world’s most comprehensive online source for definition, word origins, and a whole lot more .iWordBook.com reveals secrets of English language by delivering many services such as Related words, Word Anagram, Synonym Words, Antonym Words, Rhyme Words, Word of the Day, and many more.
Using Advanced search tool our users can search for words by specifying the beginning or ending of a word. They also can search the word by its meaning. Our users can create custom lists and see a list of recently visited words even without logging in.
Источник
A Web of Word Connections: “Apple”
Starting with a single word — “apple” — we can weave a tangled web of surprising linguistic connections, across time and space, through multiple languages and continents. So let’s take a bite of that apple, beginning our circuitous journey.
The word “apple” once had a broader meaning than it does today. In Old English and in Middle English, the word referred to any kind of fruit, other than berries. The eventual narrowing of the definition has had some interesting consequences. For example, in Genesis, Adam and Eve eat the fruit of the forbidden tree. In the original texts of Genesis, the type of tree is never specified. Therefore, in the first translation of Genesis to English, it made sense to call this unidentified fruit an “apple” — meaning any kind of large fruit. But now, because the meaning of the word has narrowed, and because the word “apple” still appears in some translations of Genesis, most people assume that the forbidden fruit was indeed an apple.
A similar narrowing has occurred with the word “corn”, although only in American English. The word once referred to any kind of grain. For example, a grain of barley can be called a barleycorn. The word “corn” was applied to all kinds of small things, such as a peppercorn. But in the U.S., the word “corn” now refers to a single species of grain crop, known to the rest of the world as “maize”.
Because the term “apple” could be ambiguous, if someone wanted to specify a particular kind of fruit, then it was often necessary to use a longer phrase. For example, in Middle English the fruit now known as “banana” was called “apple of paradise”. (Now there’s a delightful phrase!) Even today there is a fruit that we call a “pineapple”, even though it bears no resemblance to an apple. However, the fruit does superficially resemble a large pinecone — and in fact, the term “pineapple” originally meant a pinecone.
In other European languages, the word for “pineapple” does not include any reference to apples. The Spanish word for pineapple is piña, which (like the English word) is a reference to a pinecone. Most European languages other than English and Spanish use the word ananas to mean pineapple. The word ananas is from the indigenous South American language Tupi, spoken in parts of Brazil, where pineapples were eaten long before Europeans “discovered” the new world. In addition to pineapples, the Europeans learned about several other unfamiliar foods as they explored South America. For example, the word “cashew” also comes from the Tupi language.
The English word “apple” comes from a Germanic language that was ancestral to Old English. (Another name for Old English is Anglo-Saxon.) In that ancient language the word was æppel. This is nearly identical to the modern Dutch word appel, which makes perfect sense, because Dutch is descended from the same ancestral language. In German, another sister language, a shift occurred in the pronunciation of the word as the language evolved. As a result, the modern German word for apple is Apfel.
The French word for apple is pomme. Like “apple”, this word also once referred to any kind of fruit, but now refers only to apples. In fact, at one time the word could refer to any fruit-like object, not just actual fruits. Because of this history, the French word for “potato” is pomme de terre, which originally meant “fruit of the earth” — but now could be literally translated as “earth apple” or “ground apple”. Due to this same history, the French term for “French fries” is pommes frites — which of course are made from potatoes, despite the literal translation of “fried apples”.
The French word pomme was derived from the Latin word pomum, meaning apple or fruit. The corresponding word in Italian in pomo, although this is not the modern Italian word for apple. But pomo makes an appearance in pomodoro, the Italian word for tomato — which literally means “golden fruit” or “golden apple”. This suggests that the first tomatoes introduced into Italy might have been yellow or orange instead of tomato red. Like the pineapple and the potato, both mentioned earlier, the tomato was completely unknown in Europe until the discovery of the New World — which was soon followed by the discovery that Native Americans were harvesting and eating all kinds of interesting foods. Imagine Italian food without tomatoes! But until the 17th century, the Italians had no knowledge of tomatoes.
Italians still use the phrase pomo d’Adamo, which literally means “Adam’s fruit” or “Adam’s apple”, to refer to that protrusion on the neck that we English speakers also call an Adam’s apple. Another meaning of the Italian word pomo is “knob” — and if you imagine a door knob, it is vaguely fruit shaped. This is related to the word “pommel” in English, descended from the identical word in Old French, which means a rounded knob. Today the word is used to refer to the rounded knob that protrudes from the front of a horse’s saddle.
The Latin word pomum found its way into quite a few European languages — not just French and Italian — and attached itself to several kinds of fruit. For example, the Polish word for the fruit we call “orange” is pomarańcza, which literally means “orange fruit”. Likewise, the old German word appel also found its way into several European languages. For example, the Norwegian word for the fruit we call “orange” is appelsin, which literally means “Chinese fruit” — accurately reflecting the fact that oranges were first cultivated in China, dating back more than 4000 years.
English has other words that trace back to the Latin word pomum. For example, “pomology” is a branch of horticulture that deals with fruits and fruit growing. The word “pomade”, a perfumed ointment for the hair and scalp, is so named because the original recipe contained apple pulp. A particularly interesting example is the word “pomegranate”, which comes from the Old French pome grenate. The first part ( pome) obviously means apple or fruit. The second word is from the Latin word granatum — connected to our modern word “grain” — which means “seedy” or “having many seeds”. Therefore the literal meaning of pomegranate is “seedy fruit” — and if you have ever eaten a fresh pomegranate, then you know just how accurate this description is!
Languages evolve, and the French no longer refer to a pomegranate as pome grenate. By the 1500s the French term had been shortened to grenade. This looks just like the English word “grenade”, and in fact, the French word for “grenade” is also grenade. It may seem strange that the French use the same word for a fruit and an explosive weapon — but this is not a coincidence. When grenades were first invented (way back in the 16th century), they received their name because people thought that they looked a bit like pomegranates. Therefore our English word “grenade” comes from the French word for pomegranate. The next time you find yourself traveling in France, if someone there offers you a grenade, then it is probably safe to assume that they are offering you a fruit, not a weapon. However, depending upon the context, you might want to seek clarification.
The Spanish word for pomegranate is granada, which is essentially the word “pomegranate” without the “pome”. In other words, the literal meaning of the word is “seedy”. There is also a city in Spain named Granada, presumably named because it is a good place to grow pomegranates, and not because the city appears a bit seedy. The Spanish word granada also means “grenade”, so again we have the ambiguity between the fruit and weapon. However, in most circumstances you can safely make a reference to pomegranates without being branded a terrorist.
Oddly, the modern French, Spanish, and Italian words for apple are all different, originating from different sources — even though all three languages are descended from Latin. The Spanish word manzana has an especially odd origin — apparently derived (quite loosely) from the name of a Roman horticulturist who grew apples. The most obvious connection to English is “manzanita”, a native shrub commonly found in California. This word literally means “little apple”, and refers to the small fruits which hang from the shrub. In contrast to the Spanish and French words, the modern Italian word for apple is mela, and with this word we find another rich source of connections.
The Italian word mela comes from the Latin word melus, which could mean either apple or fruit. The Latin word, in turn, came from the Greek word melon, which also meant either apple or fruit. But this may seem odd, because earlier I said that the Latin word for apple or fruit was pomum. Did Latin have two words meaning exactly the same thing? The answer is that the two words were in use at different times during Roman history. Until around A.D. 400, the Latin word for apple or fruit was melus, and after that the word was replaced by pomum.
Once again, we have connections back to English. The acid which occurs naturally in apples, giving apples their tart flavor, is malic acid — a name which literally means “apple acid” or “acid from apples”. This is one of three common acids found in fruit — the other two being citric acid (named for citrus fruits) and tartaric acid (from grapes). Other fruits that contain malic acid include watermelon, bananas, apricots, blackberries, cherries, lychees, peaches, pears, and nectarines.
Now let’s consider that Greek word melon, which as we saw can mean either apple or fruit. Could this word possibly be connected to the English word “melon”? The answer is yes, but this connection is not as straightforward as it appears. In Ancient Greek, the word pepon meant “gourd”. By combining the word for fruit with the word for gourd, the Greeks created the word melopepon — literally meaning “gourd fruit” — to refer to the various fruits that we now call melons. This includes watermelons, muskmelons (cantaloupes), and other similar fruits. The word was carried into Latin, but eventually got shortened to melon. This shortened word then came into English. As a result, the English word “melon” is very similar to the Italian word mela, which means “apple” — a completely different type of fruit than a melon. But because the word mela once referred to any kind of fruit, you can also find compound words in Italian such as melagrana, which literally means “seedy fruit”, and whose translation to English is (of course) “pomegranate”!
Источник
apple (n.)
Old English æppel «apple; any kind of fruit; fruit in general,» from Proto-Germanic *ap(a)laz (source also of Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Dutch appel , Old Norse eple , Old High German apful , German Apfel ), from PIE *ab(e)l- «apple» (source also of Gaulish avallo «fruit;» Old Irish ubull , Lithuanian obuolys , Old Church Slavonic jabloko «apple»), but the exact relation and original sense of these is uncertain (compare melon).
A roted eppel amang þe holen, makeþ rotie þe yzounde. [«Ayenbite of Inwit,» 1340]
In Middle English and as late as 17c., it was a generic term for all fruit other than berries but including nuts (such as Old English fingeræppla «dates,» literally «finger-apples;» Middle English appel of paradis «banana,» c. 1400). Hence its grafting onto the unnamed «fruit of the forbidden tree» in Genesis. Cucumbers, in one Old English work, are eorþæppla , literally «earth-apples» (compare French pomme de terre «potato,» literally «earth-apple;» see also melon). French pomme is from Latin pomum «apple; fruit» (see Pomona).
As far as the forbidden fruit is concerned, again, the Quran does not mention it explicitly, but according to traditional commentaries it was not an apple, as believed by Christians and Jews, but wheat. [Seyyed Hossein Nasr, «The Heart of Islam: Enduring Values for Humanity,» 2002]
Apple of Discord (c. 1400) was thrown into the wedding of Thetis and Peleus by Eris (goddess of chaos and discord), who had not been invited, and inscribed kallisti «To the Prettiest One.» Paris, elected to choose which goddess should have it, gave it to Aphrodite, offending Hera and Athene, with consequences of the Trojan War, etc.
Apple of one’s eye (Old English), symbol of what is most cherished, was the pupil, supposed to be a globular solid body. Apple-polisher «one who curries favor» first attested 1928 in student slang. The image in the phrase upset the apple cart «spoil the undertaking» is attested from 1788. Road-apple «horse dropping» is from 1942.
Entries linking to apple
late 14c., meloun , «herbaceous, succulent trailing annual plant,» or its sweet, edible fruit, from Old French melon (13c.) and directly from Medieval Latin melonem (nominative melo ), from Latin melopeponem , a kind of pumpkin, from Greek mēlopepon «gourd-apple» (name for several kinds of gourds bearing sweet fruit), from mēlon «apple» (see malic) + pepon , a kind of gourd, which is probably a noun use of pepon «ripe» (see pumpkin).
Among the earliest plants to be domesticated. In Greek, melon was used in a generic way for all foreign fruits (compare similar use of apple). The Greek plural of «melon» was used from ancient times for «a girl’s breasts.»
Roman goddess of fruit trees and their culture, from Latin pomum «apple; fruit,» a word of uncertain origin. «Possibly from *po-emo- ‘taken off, picked’; *po-omo- or *pe-omo- are also conceivable» [de Vaan]. Or perhaps borrowed from a lost Mediterranean language. Related: Pomonical .
Источник