Rhus coriaria

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οὐδ' ἄμμε διακρινέει φιλότητος ἄλλο, πάρος θάνατόν γε μεμορμένον ἀμφικαλύψαι → nor will anything else divide us from our love before the fate of death enshrouds us (Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 3.1129f.)

Source

Wikipedia EN

Rhus coriaria, commonly called Sicilian sumac, tanner's sumach, or elm-leaved sumach, is a deciduous shrub to small tree in the cashew family Anacardiaceae. It is native to southern Europe and western Asia. The dried fruits are used as a spice, particularly in combination with other spices in the mixture called za'atar.

Translations

sumac

Afrikaans: sumak; Albanian: shqeme; Arabic: ⁧سُمَّاق⁩; Hijazi Arabic: ⁧سُمَّاق⁩; Aramaic Classical Syriac: ⁧ܣܘܡܩܐ⁩, ⁧ܐܘܓܐ⁩; Armenian: աղտոր; Azerbaijani Cyrillic: сумаг; Roman: sumaq; Basque: zumake; Bulgarian: шмак; Catalan: sumac; Cheyenne: no'aneonó'e; Chinese Mandarin: 鹽膚木屬/盐肤木属; Czech: škumpa; Danish: sumak; Dutch: sumak; Esperanto: sumako; Estonian: sumahh; Finnish: sumakki; French: sumac; Old French: sumac; Galician: sumagre; Georgian: თუთუბო; German: Sumach, Rhus; Greek: σουμάκι, ρούδι; Ancient Greek: ῥοῦς; Hebrew: ⁧אוג⁩; Hungarian: szömörce; Ido: sumako; Indonesian: sumac; Irish: sumach; Italian: sommacco; Japanese: 漆の木, ウルシノキ; Korean: 붉나무속; Kurdish Northern Kurdish: simaq; Lithuanian: žagrenis; Malay: sumac; Navajo: kʼįįʼ; Norwegian Bokmål: sumakslekta; Nynorsk: sumakslekta; Persian: ⁧سماق⁩; Polish: sumak; Portuguese: sumagre; Russian: сумах; Scots: sumac; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: сумах, сумак, руј; Roman: sȕmah, sȕmak, rȗj; Sorbian Upper Sorbian: sumak; Spanish: zumaque; Swahili: mchengele; Swedish: sumaksläktet; Turkish: sumak; Ukrainian: сумах; Urdu: ⁧سماق⁩; Uzbek: totim; Zazaki: sımaq