|
|
1. (n.) cucumber
a creeping plant, Cucumis sativus, of the gourd family, occurring in many cultivated forms.
2. cucumber
the edible fleshy green-skinned fruit of this plant, of a cylindrical shape with rounded ends.
Etymology: (1350–1400; ME < AF, OF co(u)combre < L cucumerem, acc. of cucumis)
|
| Definition of 'Cucumber' |
Princeton's WordNet |
|
1. (noun) cucumber, cucumber vine, Cucumis sativus
a melon vine of the genus Cucumis; cultivated from earliest times for its cylindrical green fruit
2. (noun) cucumber, cuke
cylindrical green fruit with thin green rind and white flesh eaten as a vegetable; related to melons
|
|
|
1. (noun) cucumber
a long green vegetable
|
| Definition of 'Cucumber' |
Webster Dictionary |
|
1. (noun) Cucumber
a creeping plant, and its fruit, of several species of the genus Cucumis, esp. Cucumis sativus, the unripe fruit of which is eaten either fresh or picked. Also, similar plants or fruits of several other genera. See below
|
|
|
Sense: a type of creeping plant with long green edible fruit, often used in salads etc.
|
Afrikaans: komkommer |
Arabic: خْيار |
Bulgarian: краставица |
Brazilian: pepino |
Czech: okurka |
German: die Gurke |
Danish: agurk |
Greek: αγγούρι |
Spanish: pepino |
Estonian: kurk |
Farsi: خیار |
Finnish: kurkku |
French: concombre |
Hebrew: מְלָפְפוֹן |
Hindi: ककड़ी |
Croatian: krastavac |
Hungarian: uborka |
Indonesian: mentimun |
Icelandic: gúrka |
Italian: cetriolo |
Japanese: きゅうり |
Korean: 오이 |
Lithuanian: agurkas |
Latvian: gurķis |
Malay: timun |
Dutch: komkommer |
Norwegian: agurk |
Polish: ogórek |
Persian: خیار |
Pashto: بادرنګ |
Portuguese: pepino |
Romanian: castravete |
Russian: огурец |
Slovak: uhorka |
Slovenian: kumara |
Serbian: krastavac |
Swedish: gurka |
Thai: แตงกวา |
Turkish: hıyar, salatalık |
Taiwanese: 小黃瓜 |
Ukrainian: огірок |
Urdu: ككڑی، كهيرا |
Vietnamese: quả dưa chuột |
Chinese: 黄瓜 |
Get even more translations for Cucumber...
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Alternative search options for 'Cucumber' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|