cantaloupe
See also: Cantaloupe
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From French cantaloup, from Italian Cantalupo (a place name), from Italian canto + lupo, literally "howl of the wolf".
Named after a former Papal summer estate near Rome, where the melons were first grown after being introduced to Europe.[1]
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈkæn.tə.luːp/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈkæn.tə.loʊp/
Audio (General Australian): (file) Audio (US, male voice): (file) Audio (US, female voice): (file)
Noun
cantaloupe (plural cantaloupes)
- Cucumis melo Cantalupensis Group, a cultivar group melon with sweet aromatic orange flesh, including two main types:
- (UK, Ireland) Cantalupensis Group sensu stricto, with non- or slightly netted rind, also known as true cantaloupe or European cantaloupe, found in the Middle East and Europe. [From 1739.]
- (Australia, Canada, US) Reticulatus Group (now merged into Cantalupensis Group), with strongly netted rind, also known as American cantaloupe, muskmelon or rockmelon.
- 2010, Mary Ellen Snodgrass, Peter Carey: A Literary Companion, page 100:
- Trevor, like an Aussie outbacker, eats snacks and a pickup meal of bread, cantaloupe, olives, mangoes, and melon.
- An orange colour, like that of cantaloupe flesh.
- cantaloupe:
- (slang, usually in the plural) A woman's breasts, particularly large breasts.
- Distracted by the way that the sudden gust of wind exposed the girl's bare thighs, he tripped on the uneven sidewalk and faceplanted straight into her soft cantaloupes.
- 2022 [1951], David Goodis, “Cassidy's Girl”, in Black Cat Weekly[1], number 52, Wildside Press, LLC, page 324:
- "I tell you I kept crossing my legs and lighting cigarettes, just hoping he'd notice me. But no. Instead he notices something sitting at a table. He sees a great big pair of cantaloupes sticking out from under a blouse."
- 2007, Maryann Reid, Use Me or Lose Me: A Novel of Love, Sex, and Drama[2], Macmillan, page 130:
- In the water, Lenox got a little frisky and Farah ended up losing her bikini top. Lenox was glad that she was definitely blessed. The peaches and grapes walking around were no comparison to her cantaloupes.
- 2019, Louella Bryant, Cowboy Code[3], Black Rose Writing, page 110:
- "Suzie that one with the pair of cantaloupes?" Freddy holds his palms out from chest.
- 2020, Nicole Kronzer, “Eleven”, in Unscripted[4], Abrams:
- Stepping back to avoid him, I knocked into Xander, who wrapped his arms around me. "Me, too," he cooed. "I love a good pair of cantaloupes."
Synonyms
- (breasts): See Thesaurus:breasts
Derived terms
Translations
melon
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References
- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2025) “cantaloupe”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Further reading
- cantaloupe on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Finnish
Etymology
From English cantaloupe, from French cantaloup.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkɑntɑluːp/, [ˈkɑ̝n̪t̪ɑ̝luːp]
- Rhymes: -ɑntɑluːp
Noun
cantaloupe
- synonym of verkkomeloni (“cantaloupe”)
Declension
| Inflection of cantaloupe (Kotus type 8/nalle, no gradation) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative | cantaloupe | cantaloupet | |
| genitive | cantaloupen | cantaloupejen | |
| partitive | cantaloupea | cantaloupeja | |
| illative | cantaloupeen | cantaloupeihin | |
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | cantaloupe | cantaloupet | |
| accusative | nom. | cantaloupe | cantaloupet |
| gen. | cantaloupen | ||
| genitive | cantaloupen | cantaloupejen cantaloupein rare | |
| partitive | cantaloupea | cantaloupeja | |
| inessive | cantaloupessa | cantaloupeissa | |
| elative | cantaloupesta | cantaloupeista | |
| illative | cantaloupeen | cantaloupeihin | |
| adessive | cantaloupella | cantaloupeilla | |
| ablative | cantaloupelta | cantaloupeilta | |
| allative | cantaloupelle | cantaloupeille | |
| essive | cantaloupena | cantaloupeina | |
| translative | cantaloupeksi | cantaloupeiksi | |
| abessive | cantaloupetta | cantaloupeitta | |
| instructive | — | cantaloupein | |
| comitative | See the possessive forms below. | ||
Derived terms
compounds