"azeitona" in Portuguese
"azeite" is olive oil
2 0 ReplyOliva in Catalan
1 0 ReplyMăslină in Romanian.
1 0 ReplyOlive. English. Glad I could help! 😁
26 0 Reply"Olive" (German).
9 0 ReplyAceituna en español
8 0 ReplyThat’s an Arabic loan word if I’ve ever seen one
2 0 ReplyYep. Spanish has a number of Arabic loan words, given Spain was conquered by the moors for a bit.
1 0 ReplyIn french argot, people still say zitoune (zitun), I believe they got it from the algerians. Otherwise it's just "olive"
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Oliven, Norwegian. For some reason it's an uncountable noun.
7 0 ReplyThis is for the purpose of being able to eat as many olives as you like and it cannot be counted.
How many olives did you eat?
Hmm, I ate olive.
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Olive in french. Boring word I guess.
5 0 ReplyDepends on the meaning (🍑👈)
4 0 ReplySure depends on the meaning ! (🍫)
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Olive ! 👍
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Alyvuogė, which I can translate into oil berry.
4 0 ReplyOliv in Swedish.
4 0 Reply橄榄(gǎn lǎn)
4 0 ReplyOliva is the fruit, olivová is the colour.
3 0 ReplyBut we rarely use the latter, much like with amber.
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The color or the fruit?
3 0 ReplyOP:
4 0 ReplyYes
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Bonus points: what’s olive oil in your language?
2 0 ReplyAlyvuogių aliejus.
2 0 ReplyI think I just summoned something
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Olive and ελιά
2 0 ReplyZaytoun in arabic
2 0 ReplyAzeitona in portuguese, so yes, it probably came from arabic.
The tree is called oliveira, and the oil is called azeite.
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มะกอก (má-gòk)
2 0 Reply7 0 Replybased on vietnamese thats not olives ; some names in english are june plum or ambarella fruit
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Wiktionary's page for 'olive' has translations of a number of meanings into many, many languages.
2 0 Replyôliu in vietnamese
2 0 ReplyThe tree is Olivo, the fruit is Aceituna.
2 0 Replyoliivi (Finnish)
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