What is “olive” in your language?
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Original question by @[email protected]
Bonus points: what’s olive oil in your language?
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Original question by @[email protected]
Zaytoun in arabic
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Zaytoun in arabic
Azeitona in portuguese, so yes, it probably came from arabic.
The tree is called oliveira, and the oil is called azeite.
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Oliva is the fruit, olivová is the colour.
But we rarely use the latter, much like with amber.
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Original question by @[email protected]
oliivi (Finnish)
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Olijf (Dutch)
And Olijfje for Popeye's girlfriend..
And Olijfgroen for the colour.
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Bonus points: what’s olive oil in your language?
Alyvuogių aliejus.
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Aceituna en español
That’s an Arabic loan word if I’ve ever seen one
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Oliven, Norwegian. For some reason it's an uncountable noun.
This is for the purpose of being able to eat as many olives as you like and it cannot be counted.
How many olives did you eat?
Hmm, I ate olive.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Olivka (oleevka) Russian.
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Original question by @[email protected]
Măslină in Romanian.
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That’s an Arabic loan word if I’ve ever seen one
In french argot, people still say zitoune (zitun), I believe they got it from the algerians. Otherwise it's just "olive"
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Depends on the meaning (
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Sure depends on the meaning ! (
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That’s an Arabic loan word if I’ve ever seen one
Yep. Spanish has a number of Arabic loan words, given Spain was conquered by the moors for a bit.
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Alyvuogių aliejus.
I think I just summoned something
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I think I just summoned something
Yeah, the language is old (grammatically closest to PIE) so it isn't easily understandable for non-speakers.
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Original question by @[email protected]
"azeitona" in Portuguese
"azeite" is olive oil
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Original question by @[email protected]
Oliva in Catalan
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Bonus points: what’s olive oil in your language?
Olivenöl. But I forrgot ze naime ov maine language