physalis

See also: Physalis

Translingual

Etymology

From Ancient Greek φυσαλλίς (phusallís, bladder), from φυσιόω (phusióō, to puff up, blow up), φυσώ (phusṓ).

Noun

physalis

  1. bladder
    • 1800/1801 (anno Reipublicæ Gallicæ IX = in the year 9 of the French Republic), Philippe Petit-Radel, De amoribus Pancharitis et Zoroæ poema erotico-didacticon, Vita auctoris, pages lxxxviij - lxxxix:
      Mitto quæ haberem dicenda de holothuriis physalibus, de medusis velellis et argonautis argo, tum loliginibus et scolopendra phosphorea (1) in quibus incidimus dum viam versus insulam de l'Ascension carperemus, utpote quæ sint ab observatoribus toties relata.
      (1) Holothuria physalis, medusa velella et Argonauta Argo dum placidum est mare, ex imis emergunt fluctibus et natantes, []

Declension

Latin: Third-declension noun (i-stem).

Case Singular Plural
Nominative phȳsalis phȳsalēs
Genitive phȳsalis phȳsalium
Dative phȳsalī phȳsalibus
Accusative phȳsalem phȳsalēs
phȳsalīs
Ablative phȳsale phȳsalibus
Vocative phȳsalis phȳsalēs
  • Holothuria physalis, Holothuria Physalis
  • Physalis

English

Physalis fruit (goldenberry, Physalis peruviana)

Etymology

From New Latin Physalis, coined by Linnaeus from Ancient Greek φυσαλλίς (phusallís, bladder, wind instrument), from φυσιόω (phusióō, to puff up, blow up), φυσώ (phusṓ).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfɪsəlɪs/, /ˈfaɪsəlɪs/, /faɪˈseɪlɪs/
  • (file)

Noun

physalis (plural physalises)

  1. Any plant of the genus Physalis.
  2. The fruit of such a plant, typically firm in texture with a mild, refreshing acidity.
    Hyponyms: cape gooseberry, goldenberry, tomatillo

Translations

Further reading

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.