Vicia sativa
μή μοι θεοὺς καλοῦσα βουλεύου κακῶς· πειθαρχία γάρ ἐστι τῆς εὐπραξίας μήτηρ, γυνὴ Σωτῆρος· ὦδ᾽ ἔχει λόγος → When you invoke the gods, do not be ill-advised. For Obedience is the mother of Success, wife of Salvation—as the saying goes.
Latin > Greek
ἀφάκη, βικία, βικίον, ἔρβουλον
Wikipedia EN
Vicia sativa, known as the common vetch, garden vetch, tare or simply vetch, is a nitrogen-fixing leguminous plant in the family Fabaceae. It is now naturalised throughout the world occurring on every continent, except Antarctica and the Arctic. The centre of diversity is thought to be the Fertile Crescent, although gold standard molecular confirmation is currently not available.
Translations
vetch
Albanian: grindë; Arabic: بِيقِيَّة; Bulgarian: фий; Catalan: veça; Chinese Cornish: gwegbys; Czech: vikev; Dutch: wikke; Estonian: hiirehernes; Finnish: virna; French: vesce; Galician: ervellaca, fabaca, veza, nichela, brenza; Georgian: ცერცველა; German: Wicke; Greek: αρακάς; Ancient Greek: ἀφάκη, βικία, βικίον, ἔρβουλον; Hebrew: כַּרְשִׁינָה; Hungarian: bükköny; Italian: veccia; Japanese: 烏野豌豆, 矢筈豌豆; Latin: ervum, vicia; Lithuanian: vikis; Middle English: fecche; Norman: vèche; Ottoman Turkish: بورچاق; Persian: ماش; Piedmontese: vëssa; Plautdietsch: Wekj; Polish: wyka; Portuguese: ervilhaca; Romanian: măzăriche; Russian: вика, горошек; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: гра̏хорица, грашица, гра̏хор, гра̏хорина, гра̏хорика; Latin: grȁhorica, grašica, grȁhor, grȁhorina, grȁhorika; Slovak: vika; Slovene: grášica, gráhor; Spanish: veza, arveja; Swedish: vicker; Turkish: fiğ