English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English clove, an alteration of earlier clowe, borrowed from the first component of Old French clou (de girofle) (modern French clou de girofle), from Latin clāvus (“nail”) for its shape. Also see clāva (“knotty branch, club”). Doublet of clou and clavus.
Noun
clove (countable and uncountable, plural cloves)
- (uncountable or countable) A very pungent aromatic spice, the unexpanded flower bud of the clove tree.
- (countable) A clove tree, of the species Syzygium aromaticum (syn. Caryophyllus aromaticus), native to the Moluccas (Indonesian islands), which produces the spice.
- (countable) An old English measure of weight, containing 7 pounds (3.2 kg), i.e. half a stone.
1843, The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, page 202:Seven pounds make a clove, 2 cloves a stone, 2 stone a tod 6+1⁄2 tods a wey, 2 weys a sack, 12 sacks a last. The 'Pathway' points out the etymology of the word cloves; it calls them ' claves or nails.' It is to be observed here that a sack is 13 tods, and a tod 28 pounds, so that the sack is 364 pounds.
1866, James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A History of Agriculture and Prices in England, volume 1, page 169:By a statute of 9 Hen. VI. it was ordained that the wey of cheese should contain 32 cloves of 7 lbs. each, i.e. 224 lbs., or 2 cwts.
Derived terms
Translations
spice
- Afrikaans: naeltjie (af)
- Albanian: karafil (sq) sg or m (Latn)
- Amharic: ቅርንፉድ (ḳərnəfud)
- Arabic: قَرَنْفُل (ar) m (qaranful)
- Egyptian Arabic: قرنفل m (ʔoronfel)
- Hijazi Arabic: قُرُنْفُل m (gurunful)
- Moroccan Arabic: قرنفل (qrunful)
- Armenian: մեխակ (hy) (mexak)
- Assamese: লং (loṅ)
- Azerbaijani: mixək (az)
- Bashkir: ҡәләмфер (qələmfer)
- Basque: iltzea
- Bengali: লবঙ্গ (bn) (loboṅgo)
- Bulgarian: карамфил (bg) m (karamfil)
- Burmese: လေးညှင်းပွင့် (my) (le:hnyang:pwang.)
- Catalan: clavell (ca) m, clavell d'espècia m, clau d'espècia f
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 丁香 (ding1 hoeng1)
- Mandarin: 丁香 (zh) (dīngxiāng)
- Classical Nahuatl: Caxtīllān chīlli
- Czech: hřebíček (cs) m
- Danish: nellike (da) c, kryddernellike (da) c
- Dhivehi: ކަރަންފޫ (karan̊fū)
- Dutch: kruidnagel (nl) m
- East Makian: odai
- Esperanto: kariofilo
- Finnish: neilikka (fi), mausteneilikka (fi)
- French: clou de girofle (fr) m
- German: Gewürznelke (de) f
- Greek: γαρύφαλλο (el) n (garýfallo)
- Ancient: καρυόφυλλον n (karuóphullon)
- Gujarati: લવિંગ (laviṅg)
- Haitian Creole: jiwòf
- Hawaiian: please add this translation if you can
- Hebrew: צִפֹּרֶן (he) f (tzippóren)
- Hindi: लौंग (lauṅg), लवंग (hi) m (lavaṅg)
- Hungarian: szegfűszeg (hu)
- Icelandic: negull m
- Indonesian: cengkih (id)
- Irish: clóbh m
- Italian: chiodo di garofano (it) m
- Japanese: クローブ (kurōbu), 丁子 (ja) (ちょうじ, chōji), 丁字 (ja) (ちょうじ, chōji)
- Javanese: ꦕꦼꦁꦏꦺꦃ (cengkéh)
- Kabardian: къэрмэфибл (kbd) (qɛrmɛfibl)
- Kannada: ಲವಂಗ (kn) (lavaṅga)
- Khmer: ក្លាំពូ (km) (klampuu)
- Korean: 정향나무 (jeonghyangnamu)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: mêxek (ku), qernefîl (ku)
- Lao: ກ້ານພູ (kān phū)
- Latvian: krustnagliņa f
- Low German:
- East Frisian Low Saxon: nóógelke n, kruudnóógel m, tengelke n (Borkum)
- Luxembourgish: Neelcheskapp m
- Macedonian: каранфилче (karanfilče)
- Malagasy: jirofo (mg)
- Malay: cengkih (ms)
- Malayalam: കരയാമ്പൂ (ml) (karayāmpū), ഗ്രാമ്പു (grāmpu)
- Maltese: qronfol
- Maori: (please verify) rōkara
- Marathi: लवंग (lavaṅga)
- Minangkabau: cangkeh
- Nepali: ल्वाङ (lwāṅ)
- Ngazidja Comorian: karanfu
- Norman: cliou d'giroufl'ye m (Jersey), cllaou d'girouflle m (Guernsey), cllou de girouflle m (continental Normandy)
- North Frisian: Naageltji m or f (Sylt), Naagelknop m or f (Sylt)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: nellik m
- Nynorsk: nellik m
- Occitan: clavèl de giròfle (oc) m
- Odia: ଲବଙ୍ଗ (or) (labaṅga)
- Oromo: qurunfudii
- Pashto: لونګ (lawong)
- Persian: قرنفل (fa) (qaranfol)
- Polish: goździk (pl) m
- Portuguese: cravo (pt) m, cravo-da-índia (pt), cravinho (pt) m, girofle m
- Romanian: cuișoare (ro) pl
- Russian: гвозди́ка (ru) f (gvozdíka)
- Samoan: please add this translation if you can
- Sanskrit: लवंग (sa) n (lavaṃga)
- Saterland Frisian: Stäietnägelke n
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: каранфилић m, клинчић m
- Roman: karanfilić m, klinčić m
- Slovene: klinček m, nageljnova žbica f
- Somali: dhaga yare
- Spanish: clavo de olor (es) m, clavo (es) m, girofle m (rare), jirofle m (rare), clavillo (es) m
- Sundanese: ᮎᮨᮀᮊᮦᮂ (cengkéh)
- Swahili: karafuu
- Swedish: kryddnejlika (sv) c
- Tagalog: kalabumpako, klabos
- Tahitian: please add this translation if you can
- Tamil: கிராம்பு (ta) (kirāmpu)
- Telugu: లవంగము (te) (lavaṅgamu)
- Ternate: bualawa
- Thai: กานพลู (th) (gaan-pluu)
- Tibetan: ལི་ཤི། (li shi)
- Tidore: gomode
- Tongan: please add this translation if you can
- Turkish: karanfil (tr)
- Ottoman Turkish: قرنفل (karanfil)
- Ukrainian: гвозди́ка f (hvozdýka)
- Vietnamese: đinh hương
- Welsh: clof m or f, clofsen f, clowsen f
- West Flemish: kruudnoagel m
- West Frisian: krûdnagel c
- Wolof: djirofe
- Yiddish: נעגעלע n (negele)
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Syzygium aromaticum
- Armenian: մեխակածառ (hy) (mexakacaṙ)
- Burmese: လေးညှင်း (my) (le:hnyang:)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 丁子香 (dīngzǐxiāng), 雞舌香 / 鸡舌香 (zh) (jīshéxiāng)
- Hindi: लौंग (lauṅg), लवंग (hi) m (lavaṅg)
- Japanese: チョウジノキ (chōji-no-ki), 丁子 (ja) (ちょうじ, chōji), チョウジ (chōji)
- Polish: goździkowiec korzenny (pl) m, drzewo goździkowe n
- Russian: гвозди́чное де́рево (gvozdíčnoje dérevo)
- Spanish: clavero (es) m, girofle m (rare), jirofle m (rare)
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Etymology 2
From Middle English clove, from Old English clufu, from Proto-West Germanic *klubu, from Proto-Germanic *klubō, related to clēofan (“to cleave, split”), hence with the verbal etymology hereafter.
Noun
clove (plural cloves)
- (horticulture, cooking) One of the small bulbs formed in the axils of the scales of a large bulb.
- clove of garlic, garlic clove, clove of a sea-onion, clove of shallot, cloves of bulbs
Translations
constitutive bulb of garlic
- Albanian: thelpi m
- Arabic: فَصّ m (faṣṣ)
- Egyptian Arabic: فص m (faṣ)
- Armenian: պճեղ (hy) (pčeġ, literally “hoof”)
- Bulgarian: скили́дка f (skilídka)
- Catalan: all (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 粒 (lap1 or nap1), 瓣 (faan6 or baan6)
- Mandarin: 瓣 (zh) (bàn)
- Czech: stroužek (cs) m
- Danish: fed n
- Dutch: teen (nl) m (literally “toe”)
- Finnish: kynsi (fi) (literally “nail”)
- French: gousse (fr) f
- Galician: dente (gl) (literally “tooth”)
- German: Zehe (de) f (literally “toe”), Knoblauchzehe (de) f
- Greek: σκελίδα (el) f (skelída)
- Ancient: γελγίς f (gelgís)
- Hawaiian: please add this translation if you can
- Hebrew: שֵׁן שׁוּם m (shen shum), שִׁנֵּי שׁוּם m pl (shinéy shum)
- Hungarian: gerezd (hu)
- Icelandic: geiri (is) m
- Indonesian: siung (id)
- Irish: ionga (ga) f (literally “nail”)
- Italian: spicchio (it) m
- Latvian: daiva f
- Macedonian: чешне n (češne)
- Malay: ulas, siung
- Maori: please add this translation if you can
- Marathi: पाकळी (mr) f (pākḷī)
- Mongolian: хумс (mn) (xums, literally “nail”)
- Norman: gousse f (Jersey)
- Norwegian: fedd n
- Old English: clufu f
- Polish: ząbek (pl) n
- Portuguese: dente (pt) (literally “tooth”)
- Romanian: cățel (ro) m (literally “puppy”)
- Russian: зубо́к (ru) m (zubók, literally “tooth”), до́лька (ru) f (dólʹka, literally “segment”) (чеснока́)
- Samoan: please add this translation if you can
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: че̏шањ m (Croatia, Bosnia), че̏н (Serbia), чесно n, чехно n
- Roman: čȅšanj (sh) m (Croatia, Bosnia), čȅn (Serbia), česno n, čehno (sh) n
- Spanish: diente (es) m (literally “tooth”)
- Swedish: klyfta (sv) c
- Tahitian: please add this translation if you can
- Telugu: పాయ (te) (pāya)
- Tongan: please add this translation if you can
- Turkish: diş (tr)
- Ukrainian: зубо́к m (zubók, literally “little tooth”)
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Etymology 3
Verb
clove
- simple past of cleave
Etymology 4
Borrowed from Dutch klove (now kloof).[1] Doublet of kloof.
Noun
clove (plural cloves)
- (geography) A narrow valley with steep sides, used in areas of North America first settled by the Dutch
Usage notes
References
Further reading
Anagrams
Middle English
Etymology 1
Inherited from Old English clufu, from Proto-West Germanic *klubu, from Proto-Germanic *klubō, related to cleven.
Pronunciation
Noun
clove (plural cloves)
- clove (bulb of garlic)
Descendants
References
Etymology 2
Noun
clove
- alternative form of clowe
Etymology 3
Noun
clove
- alternative form of cloven
Etymology 4
From Old English clēaf, 1st- and 3rd- person simple past singular of clēofan, with the vowel from the past participle.
Verb
clove
- simple past singular of cleven (“to split”)