different between grapefruit vs elephant

grapefruit

English

Etymology

Widely assumed to be a marketing term from grape +? fruit, an allusion to the supposed grapelike clusters of fruit on the tree, early 19th c. Ciardi proposes another theory: one of the pummelo's botanical names is Citrus grandis, meaning "great citrus [fruit]", due to the size of its fruit. A new pummelo variety might first have been called a "greatfruit", and through the process of dissimilation, the word came to be pronounced "grapefruit".

Pronunciation

  • (General American, Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /???e?p.f?u?t/
    (as grape + fruit, with stress on grape)

Noun

grapefruit (plural grapefruits or grapefruit)

  1. The tree of the species Citrus paradisi, a hybrid of pomelo (Citrus maxima) and sweet orange.
  2. The large spherical tart fruit produced by this tree.
    Synonyms: pomelo, shaddock, forbidden fruit

Synonyms

  • (tree): grapefruit tree; Citrus × paradisi; Citrus sinensis × Citrus grandis, Citrus sinensis × Citrus maxima

Derived terms

Translations

Further reading

  • grapefruit on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Citrus paradisi on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
  • Citrus paradisi on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
  • Grapefruits on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons

References


Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English grapefruit.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??re?p.frut/
  • Hyphenation: grape?fruit

Noun

grapefruit m (plural grapefruits, diminutive grapefruitje n)

  1. grapefruit (tree of the species Citrus paradisi)
  2. grapefruit (fruit produced by the tree of the species Citrus paradisi)

See also

  • pompelmoes

French

Noun

grapefruit m (plural grapefruits)

  1. (Switzerland) grapefruit
    Synonym: pamplemousse

grapefruit From the web:

  • what grapefruit good for
  • what grapefruit is best for weight loss
  • what grapefruit is sweet
  • what grapefruit taste like
  • what grapefruit juice is good for you
  • what grapefruit juice does to your body
  • what grapefruit is the sweetest


elephant

English

Etymology

From Middle English elefant, elefaunt, from Old French elefant, elefan, olifant, re-latinized in Middle French as elephant, from Latin elephantus, from Ancient Greek ?????? (eléph?s) (gen. ????????? (eléphantos)). Believed to be derived from an Afroasiatic form such as Proto-Berber *e?u (elephant) (compare Tahaggart Tamahaq êlu, Tamasheq alu) or Egyptian ?bw (elephant; ivory). More at ivory. Replaced Middle English olifant (from the aforementioned Old French form, from Vulgar Latin *olifantus), which replaced Old English elpend (elephant).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??l?f?nt/, /??l?f?nt/

Noun

elephant (countable and uncountable, plural elephants)

  1. A mammal of the order Proboscidea, having a trunk, and two large ivory tusks jutting from the upper jaw.
  2. (in particular) Any member of the family Elephantidae not also of the genus Mammuthus.
  3. (figuratively) Anything huge and ponderous.
  4. (paper, printing) Synonym of elephant paper
  5. (Britain, childish) used when counting to add length, so that each count takes about one second
    Let's play hide and seek. I'll count. One elephant, two elephant, three elephant...
  6. (uncountable, obsolete) Ivory.
    • He sent rich gifts of elephant and gold.

Synonyms

  • (animal): Elephas maximus, Loxodonta africana
  • (counting term): see Appendix:Words used as placeholders to count seconds

Hyponyms

  • (animal): African bush elephant, African forest elephant, Indian elephant, African elephant

Derived terms

Descendants

Related terms

Translations

Further reading

  • elephant on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Elephant (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • heptenal

Middle French

Noun

elephant m (plural elephans)

  1. elephant (animal)

Descendants

  • French: éléphant
    • Haitian Creole: elefan
    • ? Romanian: elefant
  • ? Irish: eilifint
  • ? Norman: êléphant, éléphant

elephant From the web:

  • what elephants eat
  • what elephant has the biggest ears
  • what elephants have tusks
  • what elephants learn act
  • what elephants are endangered
  • what elephants represent
  • what elephant gift ideas
  • what elephants are endangered
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