different between banana vs window
banana
English
Etymology
From Wolof banaana, via Spanish or Portuguese.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: b?-nä?n?, IPA(key): /b??n??n?/
- (General American) enPR: b?-n??n?, IPA(key): /b??næn?/
- Rhymes: -??n?, -æn?
- Hyphenation: ba?na?na
Noun
banana (countable and uncountable, plural bananas)
- An elongated curved tropical fruit that grows in bunches and has a creamy flesh and a smooth skin.
- (Canada, US, Britain, Ireland) Especially, the sweet, yellow fruit of the Cavendish banana cultivar.
- The tropical tree-like plant which bears clusters of bananas. The plant, usually of the genus Musa but sometimes also including plants from Ensete, has large, elongated leaves and is related to the plantain.
- (uncountable) A yellow colour, like that of a banana's skin.
- (mildly derogatory, slang, ethnic slur) A person of Asian descent, especially a Chinese American, who has assimilated into Western culture or married a Caucasian (from the "yellow" outside and "white" inside). Compare coconut (“assimilated Hispanic or Black”) or Oreo (“Black person who is "black outside" and "white inside"”).
- (nuclear physics) A banana equivalent dose.
- (colloquial) A catamorphism (from the use of banana brackets in the notation).
- (slang) The penis.
- 1986 Cop Feels of Three Men's "Privates" Christopher Street - Volume 10
- The fact that the cop bought O'Brien a beer after feeling of his banana suggests that it must have been a promising one
- 2012 Sarah Miynowski Fishbowl page 36
- His you-know-what turned soft .. his eight o'clock class was the last thing on his mind five minutes ago, when his banana wasn't overripe.
- 2014 Anthony Bunko Lord Forgive Me page 71
- Most of the gang were trying their best to shag the girls. One boy was sitting in a tree playing with himself and another was asking a table of teenagers if they would like to see his banana.
- 2017 Intimate Relationships in Cinema, Literature and Visual Culture page 234
- He adds that after eating his banana (sucking his penis), he wants anal sex, but she asks him to lick her pussy. Then he tells her no because it is disgusting.
- 1986 Cop Feels of Three Men's "Privates" Christopher Street - Volume 10
- (sports) A banana kick.
Synonyms
- (Asian assimilated into Western culture): jook-sing, Twinkie
Antonyms
- (Asian assimilated into Western culture): egg (Western assimilated into Asian culture)
Coordinate terms
- (Asian assimilated into Western culture): coconut
- (fruit): finger, hand
Derived terms
Translations
Adjective
banana (not comparable)
- Curved like a banana, especially of a ball in flight.
- 2001, Rayne Barton, The Green Hills Golf Chronicles, page 155, ?ISBN.
- Even the lowly banana ball, the bane of so many weekenders, sometimes can be exactly right, as in this case.
- 2002, Andrew Collins, Guild of Honor, page 53, ?ISBN.
- He played the fading, low-banana shot as planned, and the ball whistled left of the oak tree and between the pines.
- 2006, Richard Witzig, The Global Art of Soccer, page 247, ?ISBN.
- [...]Bernd Schneider closed the scoring in injury-time with a 23 meter free-kick banana shot into the upper-right corner.
- 2001, Rayne Barton, The Green Hills Golf Chronicles, page 155, ?ISBN.
Hypernyms
- bunch
- hand
- Appendix:English collective nouns
See also
- bananas (adj)
Anagrams
- Annaba
Asturian
Noun
banana f (plural bananes)
- banana (fruit)
Synonyms
- plátanu
Catalan
Pronunciation
- (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /b??na.n?/
- (Valencian) IPA(key): /ba?na.na/
Noun
banana f (plural bananes)
- banana (fruit)
Synonyms
- plàtan
Derived terms
- bananer
Further reading
- “banana” in Diccionari de la llengua catalana, segona edició, Institut d’Estudis Catalans.
Cornish
Etymology
From English banana
Pronunciation
- (Revived Middle Cornish) IPA(key): [ba?na?na]
- (Revived Late Cornish) IPA(key): [b??næ?n?]
Noun
banana m (plural bananas)
- banana
Mutation
French
Verb
banana
- third-person singular past historic of bananer
Galician
Noun
banana f (plural bananas)
- banana (fruit)
Synonyms
- (banana): plátano
Related terms
- bananeira
Icelandic
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -a?nana
Noun
banana
- definite accusative plural of bani
- inflection of banani:
- indefinite accusative
- indefinite dative singular
- indefinite genitive
Irish
Etymology
From Wolof banaana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /b???n??an???/
Noun
banana m (genitive singular banana, nominative plural bananaí)
- banana
Declension
Derived terms
- crann bananaí (“banana-tree”)
Mutation
Further reading
- "banana" in Foclóir Gaeilge–Béarla, An Gúm, 1977, by Niall Ó Dónaill.
Italian
Pronunciation
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ba?na.na/
Noun
banana f (plural banane)
- banana (fruit)
Noun
banana m (invariable)
- banana (color)
Adjective
banana (invariable)
- banana
Related terms
- banano
Japanese
Romanization
banana
- R?maji transcription of ???
Lower Sorbian
Etymology
From German Banane, from ultimately from Wolof banaana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ba?nana/
Noun
banana f
- banana
Declension
References
- banana in Manfred Starosta (1999): Dolnoserbsko-nimski s?ownik / Niedersorbisch-deutsches Wörterbuch. Bautzen: Domowina-Verlag.
- Lower Sorbian vocabulary. In: Haspelmath, M. & Tadmor, U. (eds.) World Loanword Database. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
Maltese
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
Noun
banana f (plural bananiet)
- banana (fruit)
Portuguese
Etymology
Uncertain. Possibly from Wolof banaana (“banana”) or Arabic ??????? (ban?n, “fingertip, banana”).
Pronunciation
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /b??n?.n?/
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ba?n?.n?/, /b??n?.n?/
Noun
banana f (plural bananas)
- banana (fruit)
- banana (plant)
- Synonym: bananeira (more common)
- (informal) penis
- (Brazil, informal) bras d'honneur (obscene gesture)
- Synonym: manguito (Portugal)
Noun
banana m, f (plural bananas)
- (derogatory, slang) wimp (a weak or inconfident person)
Romanian
Noun
banana f
- definite singular nominative/accusative of banan?
Sardinian
Etymology
From Spanish banana, from Wolof banaana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /banana/
Noun
banana f (plural bananas)
- banana (fruit)
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
From Spanish, from Portuguese, from Wolof banaana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ban??na/
- Hyphenation: ba?na?na
Noun
banána f (Cyrillic spelling ???????)
- banana
Declension
References
- “banana” in Hrvatski jezi?ni portal
Spanish
Etymology
From Wolof banaana.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ba?nana/, [ba?na.na]
Noun
banana f (plural bananas)
- (Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay) banana (fruit)
- Synonyms: plátano, guineo, cambur, banano
Usage notes
- banana may also be used in Spain, to differentiate from plátano (“plantain”); otherwise, plátano refers to either.
Derived terms
- banano, bananero
Further reading
- “banana” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.
Tok Pisin
Etymology
From English banana.
Noun
banana
- banana
Welsh
Etymology
From English banana, from Wolof banaana, via Portuguese and/or Spanish.
Pronunciation
- (North Wales) IPA(key): /ba?nana/
- (South Wales) IPA(key): /ba?na?na/, /ba?nana/
Noun
banana f (plural bananas)
- banana
Synonyms
- (jocular) ffrwchnedden
Mutation
banana From the web:
- what bananas used to look like
- what bananas good for
- what banana republic means
- what banana went extinct
- what bananas to use for banana bread
- what banana are you
- what banana republic stores are closing
- what bananas do to your body
window
English
Etymology
From Middle English windowe, windohe, windoge, from Old Norse vindauga (“window”, literally “wind-eye", "wind-aperture", "wind-hole”), i.e. ("air-hole"), equivalent to wind +? eye. Cognate with Scots wyndo, wyndok, winnock (“window”), Faroese vindeyga (“window”), Norwegian Nynorsk vindauga, Norwegian Bokmål vindu (“window”), Danish vindue (“window”), Swedish vindöga (“window”), Elfdalian windog and older German Windauge. The “windows” among early Germanic peoples were just unglazed holes (eyes) in the wall or roof that permitted wind to pass through (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?). Superseded Middle English fenestre, fenester (“window”) borrowed from Old French fenestre (“window”)
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?w?nd??/
- (US) enPR: w?n?d?, IPA(key): /?w?ndo?/, [?w???o?]
- (some accents) enPR: w?n?d?, IPA(key): /?w?nd?/
- Rhymes: -?nd??
- Hyphenation: win?dow
Noun
window (countable and uncountable, plural windows)
- An opening, usually covered by one or more panes of clear glass, to allow light and air from outside to enter a building or vehicle.
- 1952, L. F. Salzman, Building in England, p.173:
- A window is an opening in a wall to admit light and air.
- 1952, L. F. Salzman, Building in England, p.173:
- An opening, usually covered by glass, in a shop which allows people to view the shop and its products from outside; a shop window.
- (architecture) The shutter, casement, sash with its fittings, or other framework, which closes a window opening.
- A period of time when something is available.
- A restricted range.
- 2015, Patrick R. Nicolas, Scala for Machine Learning (page 109)
- In this case, a band-pass filter using a range or window of frequencies is appropriate to isolate the frequency or the group of frequencies that characterize a specific cycle.
- 2015, Patrick R. Nicolas, Scala for Machine Learning (page 109)
- (graphical user interface) A rectangular area on a computer terminal or screen containing some kind of user interface, displaying the output of and allowing input for one of a number of simultaneously running computer processes.
- A figure formed of lines crossing each other.
- 1709, William King, Art of Cookery
- till he has windows on his bread and butter
- 1709, William King, Art of Cookery
- (medicine) The time between first infection and detectability.
- (military, historical, uncountable) Synonym of chaff (“strips of material intended to confuse radar”)
Coordinate terms
- door
Derived terms
Related terms
- wind
Translations
Verb
window (third-person singular simple present windows, present participle windowing, simple past and past participle windowed)
- (transitive) To furnish with windows.
- (transitive) To place at or in a window.
window From the web:
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- what window treatments are in style for 2020
- what window treatments are in style for 2021
- what windows bit do i have
- what window tint is legal
- what windows get the most light
- what windows is a chromebook
- what windows 10 should i get
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