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1 turnip
['tɜːnɪp] noun [weiße] Rübe* * *[tə:nip]2) (the root used as food: Would you like some turnip?) die Rübe* * *tur·nip[ˈtɜ:nɪp, AM ˈtɜ:r-]* * *['tɜːnɪp]nRübe f; (= swede) Steckrübe f; (hum inf, = pocket watch) Zwiebel f (hum inf)* * ** * *['tɜːnɪp] noun [weiße] Rübe* * *n.Rübe -n f.Steckrübe f. -
2 turnip
tur·nip [ʼtɜ:nɪp, Am ʼtɜ:r-] n[Steck]rübe f;\turnip greens Rübstielgemüse nt -
3 turnip
< agri> ■ Rübe f ; Arum triphyllum -
4 turnip
germ. rebjæ; rebæ- (2) -
5 turnip
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6 turnip
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7 turnip cabbage
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8 turnip harvester
< agri> ■ Futterrübenroder m -
9 turnip lifter
< agri> ■ Futterrübenroder m -
10 Indian turnip
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11 Swedish turnip
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12 Swede
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13 Halloween
Hal·low·een [ˌhæləʊʼwi:n, Am -loʊʼ-] nHalloween nt¿ Kultur?Halloween ist am 31. Oktober, dem Tag vor All Saints' Day oder All Hallows - Allerheiligen und wird seit alters her mit Geistern und Hexen in Verbindung gebracht. In Schottland und Irland basteln Kinder turnip lanterns - Rübenlaternen und gehen guising, d.h. sie gehen in Verkleidung von Haus zu Haus und erhalten für ihr Singen oder Aufsagen von Gedichten Geld. In den USA verkleiden sich Kinder an diesem Abend und gehen mit einem Sack in der Hand von Tür zu Tür. Wenn die Bewohner ihre Haustür aufmachen, rufen sie Trick or treat!: Man soll ihnen einen treat - Süßigkeit geben oder man bekommt einen trick - Streich gespielt.
См. также в других словарях:
Turnip — Tur nip, n. [OE. turnep; probably fr. turn, or F. tour a turn, turning lathe + OE. nepe a turnip, AS. n[=ae]pe, L. napus. Cf. {Turn},v. t., {Navew}.] (Bot.) The edible, fleshy, roundish, or somewhat conical, root of a cruciferous plant ({Brassica … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
turnip — 1530s, turnepe, probably from TURN (Cf. turn) (from its shape, as though turned on a lathe) + M.E. nepe turnip, from O.E. næp, from L. napus turnip. The modern form of the word emerged late 18c … Etymology dictionary
turnip — [tʉr′nip] n. [earlier turnep, prob. < TURN or Fr tour, in the sense of “turned, round” + ME nepe < OE næp, turnip < L napus] 1. a) a biennial plant (Brassica rapa) of the crucifer family, with edible, hairy leaves and a roundish, light… … English World dictionary
Turnip — (engl., spr. Törrnip, Turnips), die Runkel od. Futterrübe, s.u. Kohlrübe … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Turnip — (Tör–), engl., die Runkelrübe … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
turnip — ► NOUN ▪ a round root with white or cream flesh which is eaten as a vegetable. ORIGIN from a first element of unknown origin + NEEP(Cf. ↑N) … English terms dictionary
Turnip — taxobox name = Turnip image caption = Small turnip root regnum = Plantae unranked divisio = Angiosperms unranked classis = Eudicots unranked ordo = Rosids ordo = Brassicales familia = Brassicaceae genus = Brassica species = B. rapa subspecies = B … Wikipedia
turnip — turniplike, adj. /terr nip/, n. 1. the thick, fleshy, edible root of either of two plants of the mustard family, the white fleshed Brassica rapa rapifera or the yellow fleshed rutabaga. 2. the plant itself. 3. the root of this plant used as a… … Universalium
turnip — (Roget s IV) n. Syn. domestic turnip, rutabaga, Swedish turnip, turnip cabbage, kohlrabi, Teltow turnip, wild turnip, Indian turnip; see also vegetable … English dictionary for students
turnip — [16] Etymologically, a turnip may be a ‘turned neep’ – that is, a neep, or turnip, that has been ‘turned’ on a lathe, so as to be round (the turnip is a roughly spherical vegetable). Its second syllable, nip, goes back ultimately to Latin nāpus… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
turnip — [16] Etymologically, a turnip may be a ‘turned neep’ – that is, a neep, or turnip, that has been ‘turned’ on a lathe, so as to be round (the turnip is a roughly spherical vegetable). Its second syllable, nip, goes back ultimately to Latin nāpus… … Word origins