pomegranate

listen to the pronunciation of pomegranate
English - Turkish
(isim) nar
Punica granatum
nar

Anne, bana bir nar almanı istiyorum! - Mommy, I want you to buy me a pomegranate!

Kaşgar narları en ünlüsüdür. - Kashgar's pomegranates are the most famous.

nar tanesi
pomegranate syrup
(Gıda) nar ekşisi
pomegranate apple
nar
pomegranate apple
(isim)r
pomegranate tree
nar ağacı
pomegranate tree
(Botanik, Bitkibilim) nar
pomegranate tree
(isim)r ağacı
English - English
The fruit of these plants, about the size of an orange and having a red pulp containing many seeds and enclosed in a thick, hard, reddish skin
Any of several shrubs or small trees, of the genus Punica, bearing the fruit of the same name
A fruit which symbolizes death The pomegranate was used by Hades to keep Persephone in the underworld
{n} the name of a tree or its fruit
The fruit is as large as an orange, and has a hard rind containing many rather large seeds, each one separately covered with crimson, acid pulp
The pomegranate is an orange-sized fruit with a hard leathery skin Inside are hundreds of edible seeds with a sweet pleasantly acidic taste Pomegranates are eaten out-of-hand, used in salads, and sprinkled over desserts
The fruit of the shrub or tree of the same name, about the size of an orange and having a red pulp containing many seeds and enclosed in a thick, hard, reddish skin
large globular fruit having many seeds with juicy red pulp in a tough brownish-red rind shrub or small tree native to southwestern Asia having large red many-seeded fruit
shrub or small tree native to southwestern Asia having large red many-seeded fruit
A pomegranate is a round fruit with a thick reddish skin. It contains lots of small seeds with juicy flesh around them. Fruit of Punica granatum, a bush or small tree of Asia, which with a little-known species from the island of Socotra constitutes the family Punicaceae. Native to Iran and long cultivated around the Mediterranean and in India, it also grows in the warmer parts of the New World. The orange-sized and obscurely six-sided fruit has smooth, leathery, brownish yellow to red skin. Several chambers contain many thin, transparent vesicles of reddish, juicy pulp, each containing an angular, elongated seed. The fruit is eaten fresh, and the juice is the source of the grenadine syrup used in flavourings and liqueurs. The plant grows 16-23 ft (5-7 m) tall and has elliptical, bright green leaves and handsome orange-red flowers. Throughout the Orient, the pomegranate has since earliest times occupied a position of importance alongside the grape and the fig. It is mentioned in the Bible, by the Prophet Muhammad, and in Greek mythology
A strangely constructed fruit - a labyrinth of seeds wrapped in fruit buried in a mass of inedible flesh surrounded by a tough skin The pulp and juice surrounding the tiny seeds have a sweet-tart flavor Pomegranate juice is used in making Grenadine and pomegranate molasses is available in Middle Eastern stores
Anar Fruit
{i} type of red fruit that has a tough skin and many seeds
large globular fruit having many seeds with juicy red pulp in a tough brownish-red rind
A strange constructed fruit -- a labyrinth of seeds wrapped in fruit buried in a mass of inedible flesh surrounded by a tough skin The pulp and juice surrounding the tiny seeds have a sweet-tart flavor Pomegranate juice is used in making Grenadine and pomegranate molasses is available in Middle Eastern stores
reddish, round fruit with thin, leathery skin and brilliant red, juicy, jewel-like seeds with a sweet-tart flavor; the cream-colored membrane between seeds must be discarded
A shrub or small tree bearing the fruit of the same name
A carved or embroidered ornament resembling a pomegranate
the fruit of Hades, some of these seeds were eaten by Pesephone who then was called back to spend some time of the year with Hades The pomegranate itself represents the uterus with ova, the seeds of life and the cycle's that we travel A positive sign
The fruit of the tree Punica Granatum; also, the tree itself (see Balaustine), which is native in the Orient, but is successfully cultivated in many warm countries, and as a house plant in colder climates
punica granatum
A pomegranate
grenade
native pomegranate
small Australian tree bearing edible fruit resembling the pomegranate
pomegranates
plural of pomegranate
pomegranate

    Hyphenation

    pome·gran·ate

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'pä-m&-"gra-n&t; ] (noun.) 14th century. From Medieval Latin pomum granatum via Old French pome grenate.
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