θρύμβη: Difference between revisions

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τὴν πρὶν ἐνεσφρήγισσεν Ἔρως θρασὺς εἰκόνα μορφῆς ἡμετέρης θερμῷ βένθεϊ σῆς κραδίης → the image of my beauty that bold Love earlier stamped in the hot depths of your heart

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|mltxt=[[θρύμβη]], ἡ (Α)<br />το [[φυτό]] [[θρούμπι]].
|mltxt=[[θρύμβη]], ἡ (Α)<br />το [[φυτό]] [[θρούμπι]].
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|trtx====[[savory]]===
Albanian: shtërmen, thrumbishtë; Arabic: ⁧نَدْغ⁩; Armenian: կորթին, ծոթրին, կորդյուն, ծիթրոն, մարզա; Bulgarian: чубрица; Czech: saturejka; Danish: sar; Dutch: [[bonenkruid]]; Finnish: kynteli; French: [[sarriette]]; Galician: segorella; Georgian: ქონდარი; German: [[Bohnenkraut]]; Greek: [[θρούμπι]], [[θρουμπί]], [[θύμπρι]], [[θρούμπη]]; Ancient Greek: [[θύμβρα]]; Hungarian: csombord, borsikafű; Italian: [[santoreggia]]; Japanese: キダチハッカ, セイボリー; Latin: [[cunela]], [[satureia]]; Macedonian: чубрика; Persian: ⁧مرزه⁩; Polish: cząber; Portuguese: [[segurelha]]; Romanian: cimbru; Russian: [[сатурея]], [[чабер]]; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: чу̏бар, ври̑сак; Latin: [[čȕbar]], [[vrȋsak]]; Slovene: šetraj, čober; Spanish: [[ajedrea]]; Swedish: kyndel; Turkish: zahter – however, like zaatar, the name is also used for other similar herbs; Ukrainian: чабер; Welsh: sewyrllys, safri
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Revision as of 15:56, 17 February 2024

Greek Monolingual

θρύμβη, ἡ (Α)
το φυτό θρούμπι.

Translations

savory

Albanian: shtërmen, thrumbishtë; Arabic: ⁧نَدْغ⁩; Armenian: կորթին, ծոթրին, կորդյուն, ծիթրոն, մարզա; Bulgarian: чубрица; Czech: saturejka; Danish: sar; Dutch: bonenkruid; Finnish: kynteli; French: sarriette; Galician: segorella; Georgian: ქონდარი; German: Bohnenkraut; Greek: θρούμπι, θρουμπί, θύμπρι, θρούμπη; Ancient Greek: θύμβρα; Hungarian: csombord, borsikafű; Italian: santoreggia; Japanese: キダチハッカ, セイボリー; Latin: cunela, satureia; Macedonian: чубрика; Persian: ⁧مرزه⁩; Polish: cząber; Portuguese: segurelha; Romanian: cimbru; Russian: сатурея, чабер; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: чу̏бар, ври̑сак; Latin: čȕbar, vrȋsak; Slovene: šetraj, čober; Spanish: ajedrea; Swedish: kyndel; Turkish: zahter – however, like zaatar, the name is also used for other similar herbs; Ukrainian: чабер; Welsh: sewyrllys, safri