loquat

listen to the pronunciation of loquat
English - Turkish
Maltaeriği
yenidünya ağacı
malta eriği
Yenidünya ağaç veya meyvası, maltaeriği, (bot.) Eriobotrya japonica
yenidünya ağaç veya meyvası
maltaerik
Eriobotrya japonica
{i} yenidünya

Çocukluğumda karpuz, mandalina ve yenidünya meyvelerini yemeyi seven bir köpeğim vardı. - In my childhood I had a dog that loved to eat watermelon, mandarins and loquats.

English - English
The fruit of the Japanese medlar (Photinia japonica). It is as large as a small plum, but grows in clusters, and contains four or five large seeds
The tree which bears loquat fruit
Also, the tree itself
{i} ornamental evergreen tree native to China and Japan; yellow plumlike fruit of the loquat tree, Japanese plum
The fruit of the Japanese medlar (Photinia Japonica)
Subtropical evergreen tree (Eriobotrya japonica) of the rose family, related to the apple and other well-known fruit trees of the temperate zone. Usually less than 33 ft (10 m) tall, it is common in parks and gardens, often trained to ornamental flatttened shapes by espalier. Dense, fragrant, white flowers grow beyond clusters of leaves with serrated edges. The small yellow-orange fruits have a pleasant, mildly acid taste; they are eaten fresh, stewed, or as jelly or liqueur. The loquat is grown commercially (usually on a small scale) in many subtropical regions
evergreen tree of warm regions having fuzzy yellow olive-sized fruit with a large free stone; native to China and Japan
yellow olive-sized semitropical fruit with a large free stone and relatively little flesh; used for jellies evergreen tree of warm regions having fuzzy yellow olive-sized fruit with a large free stone; native to China and Japan
It is as large as a small plum, but grows in clusters, and contains four or five large seeds
yellow olive-sized semitropical fruit with a large free stone and relatively little flesh; used for jellies
loquat

    Hyphenation

    lo·quat

    Turkish pronunciation

    lōkwät

    Pronunciation

    /ˈlōˌkwät/ /ˈloʊˌkwɑːt/

    Etymology

    [ 'lO-"kwät ] (noun.) 1820. From Chinese Cantonese trad. 蘆橘, simpl. 芦橘 (pinyin: lou4 gwat1) (older word)
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