thyme
English > Greek (Woodhouse)
substantive
wild thyme: Ar. ἕρπυλλος, ὁ.
Translations
Albanian: trumzë, shtërmen; Akkadian: 𒄩𒋗𒌑.; Arabic: زَعْتَر, صَعْتَر, حَاشَا; Egyptian Arabic: زعتر; Aramaic Hebrew: חָשָׁא, חָאשָׁא; Syriac: ܚܫܐ, ܚܐܫܐ; Armenian: ուրց; Belarusian: чабор; Bulgarian: мащерка; Catalan: farigola, timó, tomello, timonet, tomell; Chinese Mandarin: 百里香, 麝香草; Cornish: kosfinel; Czech: mateřídouška, tymián; Danish: timian; Dutch: tijm; Esperanto: timiano; Estonian: liivatee; Finnish: timjami, ajuruoho; French: thym; Galician: tomiño, tormentelo, tromentelo; Georgian: ქონდარი; German: Thymian; Greek: θυμάρι; Ancient Greek: θύμον, θύμος; Greenlandic: tupaarnaq; Hebrew: תימין, קוֹרָנִית; Hungarian: kakukkfű; Icelandic: timjan; Ido: timiano; Irish: tím; Italian: timo; Japanese: タイム; Kurdish Northern Latin: thymum; Lithuanian: čiobrẽlis, čiõbras; Macedonian: тимијан, мајчина душичка, матерка; Manx: teim; Maori: tāima; Norwegian Bokmål: timian; Nynorsk: timian; Occitan: frigola; Persian: آویشن, حاشا; Polish: tymianek, macierzanka; Portuguese: tomilho, timo; Romanian: lămâioară, cimbru; Russian: тимьян, чабрец; Scottish Gaelic: tìom; Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: тѝмија̄н; Latin: tìmijan; Sorbian Upper Sorbian: duška, babyduška, babina duška; Slovene: tȋmijan; Spanish: tomillo; Swedish: timjan; Tagalog: tomilyo; Tatar: чабыр; Turkish: kekik; Ukrainian: чебрець; Urdu: حاشا; Vietnamese: húng tây; Welsh: teim, gruw