pineapple

listen to the pronunciation of pineapple
English - Turkish
{i} ananas

Mary sabahleyin ananas yemeyi sever. - Mary likes to eat pineapple in the morning.

Beş ananas yemek istiyorum. - I would like to have five pineapples.

{i} el bombası
pineapple juice
ananas suyu
pineapple plant
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) ananas
pineapple disease
(Denizbilim) su toplama hastalığı
English - English
A hand grenade
An Australian fifty dollar note
The ovoid fruit of the pineapple plant, which has very sweet, white or yellow flesh, a tough, spiky shell and a tough, fibrous core
A tropical plant native to South America, having thirty or more long, spined and pointed leaves surrounding a thick stem
Its origin is unknown, though conjectured to be American
A carving detail commonly used on 19th century furniture (and reproductions) as a symbol of hospitality
large sweet fleshy tropical fruit with a terminal tuft of stiff leaves; widely cultivated a tropical American plant bearing a large fleshy edible fruit with a terminal tuft of stiff leaves; widely cultivated in the tropics
A pineapple is a large oval fruit that grows in hot countries. It is sweet, juicy, and yellow inside. It has a thick brownish skin. Fruit-bearing plant (Ananas comosus) of the family Bromeliaceae, native to the New World tropics and subtropics but introduced elsewhere. Pineapple is served fresh where available and in canned form worldwide. It is a key ingredient in Polynesian cuisine. Like agave and some yuccas, the plant has a rosette of 30-40 stiff, succulent leaves on a thick, fleshy stem. A determinate inflorescence forms 15-20 months after planting. After fertilization, the many lavender flowers fuse and become fleshy to form the 2-4 lb (1-2 kg) fruit. Ripening takes 5-6 months
Any of a number of variants of hold'em in which each player gets three cards and must discard one at some point (usually before or after pre-flop betting, after the flop, or after the second round of betting)
Any of a number of variants of hold 'em in which each player gets three cards and must discard one at some point
slang for hand grenade
a tropical fruit with a spiky yellow-brown skin
large sweet fleshy tropical fruit with a terminal tuft of stiff leaves; widely cultivated
a tropical American plant bearing a large fleshy edible fruit with a terminal tuft of stiff leaves; widely cultivated in the tropics
A tropical plant (Ananassa sativa); also, its fruit; so called from the resemblance of the latter, in shape and external appearance, to the cone of the pine tree
Ananas Fruit
The enzymes from this tropical fruit are said to have astringent qualities and have great cleansing properties Hair can benefit from added moisture and shine that can be imparted from this fruit This extract is also believed to soothe skin and aid in reducing surface inflammation
{i} type of tropical plant having large fleshy fruit and sharp leaves; fruit of this plant
{s} of pineapple fruit, made from pineapple fruit
An exceedingly juicy fruit with a distinctive tangy sweet taste Pineapples must be picked when ripe because they won't ripen off the plant The English named this fruit for its resemblance to a pine cone
ananas
Pineapple Express
Nickname for the jetstream and accompanying strong, moist airflow from the vicinity of the Hawaiian Islands to the west coast of North America

A warm, wet rainstorm—the notorious Pineapple Express—hit Western Washington the weekend before Thanksgiving in 1986.

pineapple guavas
plural form of pineapple guava
pineapple juice
the juice of pineapples (usually bottled or canned)
pineapple liquor
sweet pineapple-flavored alcoholic beverage
pineapple weed
annual aromatic weed of Pacific coastal areas (United States and northeastern Asia) having bristle-pointed leaves and rayless yellow flowers
pineapple weed
A strongly aromatic, western North American plant (Matricaria matricarioides) having greenish-yellow discoid flower heads and an odor of pineapple when crushed
A pineapple
pine
The pineapple
pina
pineapples
plural of pineapple
pineapple

    Hyphenation

    pine·ap·ple

    Turkish pronunciation

    paynäpıl

    Pronunciation

    /ˈpīnˌapəl/ /ˈpaɪnˌæpəl/

    Etymology

    () A calque of Dutch sparappel (“pine cone”), from the resemblance of the fruit to a pine cone, as noted by Dutch importers of the fruit to Europe.

    Videos

    ... I guess my favorite fruit would be pineapple. ...
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