English
Etymology
From Middle English myldew, from Old English meledēaw, mildēaw, from Proto-West Germanic *milidauw, from *mili (“honey”) + *dauw (“dew”). Compare West Frisian moaldau, Dutch meeldauw, German Mehltau. More at dew.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈmɪl.djuː/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈmɪl.d(j)u/
- Rhymes: -ɪldjuː, -ɪldu
Noun
mildew (uncountable)
- (phytopathology) A growth of minute powdery or webby fungi, whitish or of different colors, found on various diseased or decaying substances.
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
growth of minute fungi
- Afrikaans: skimmel (af)
- Albanian: myk (sq) m
- Arabic: تَعَفُّن m (taʕaffun), عُفُونَة f (ʕufūna)
- Armenian: բորբոս (hy) (borbos)
- Azerbaijani: kif
- Belarusian: цвіль f (cvilʹ), пле́сня f (pljésnja), бро́сня f (brósnja)
- Bulgarian: мана (bg) f (mana)
- Catalan: míldiu
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 霉菌 (zh) (méijūn), 霉 (zh) (méi)
- Czech: plíseň (cs) f
- Danish: meldug (da), mug n or c
- Dutch: schimmel (nl) m, meeldauw (nl) m
- Esperanto: melduo, (please verify) ŝimo
- Finnish: home (fi)
- French: mildiou (fr) m
- Georgian: ობი (obi), მილდიუ (mildiu), ჭრაქი (ka) (č̣raki)
- German: Mehltau (de) m, Schimmel (de) m
- Greek: μούχλα (el) f (moúchla)
- Ancient: ἐρυσίβη f (erusíbē)
- Hawaiian: kūkaeloli
- Hebrew: טַחַב (he) m (takhav)
- Hindi: फफूंदी (phaphūndī)
- Hungarian: lisztharmat (hu), üszög (hu), rozsda (hu), peronoszpóra (hu), penész (hu)
- Hunsrik: Milldau m
- Indonesian: kapang (id), cendawan (id)
- Irish: caonach liath m, coincleach f
- Italian: muffa (it) f
- Jamaican Creole: junjo
- Japanese: 黴 (ja) (かび, kabi)
- Kazakh: зай (zai), зең (zeñ)
- Khmer: ផ្សិត (km) (phsət)
- Korean: 곰팡이 (gompang'i)
- Kyrgyz: көк дат (kök dat)
- Latin: aurūgō f, rōbīgō f
- Latvian: pelējums (lv) m
- Lithuanian: miltligė f
- Macedonian: му́вла (mk) f (múvla)
- Maori: kūpā, kāhekaheka, hōpurupuru
- Mongolian: хөгц (mn) (xögc)
- Old English: mildēaw m or n, meledēaw m or n
- Ottoman Turkish: كوف (küf)
- Polish: pleśń (pl) f
- Portuguese: míldio m, mofo (pt) m
- Romanian: mucegai (ro)
- Russian: пле́сень (ru) f (plésenʹ), ми́лдью (ru) f (míldʹju)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: плесан f, плијесан f, буђ m or f
- Roman: plesan (sh) f, plijesan (sh) f, buđ (sh) m or f
- Slovak: pleseň (sk) f
- Slovene: plesen f
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: pómjodk m, mjodnica f
- Upper Sorbian: pomjedź f
- Spanish: moho (es) m, mildiu
- Swedish: mjöldagg (sv)
- Tagalog: tagulamin
- Tajik: мағор (maġor), пӯпанак (püpanak), карра (karra)
- Tausug: kapu-kapu
- Thai: please add this translation if you can
- Tibetan: ཧམ་འབུ (ham 'bu)
- Turkish: küf (tr)
- Ukrainian: плі́снява (plísnjava), цвіль (uk) f (cvilʹ), плі́сень (uk) f (plísenʹ)
- Uzbek: mogʻor (uz), poʻpanak (uz)
- Vietnamese: mốc (vi)
- Welsh: llwydni m
- West Frisian: skimmel
|
Verb
mildew (third-person singular simple present mildews, present participle mildewing, simple past and past participle mildewed)
- (transitive) To taint with mildew.
c. 1603–1606, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of King Lear”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iv], page 298, column 1:Hee giues the Web and the Pin, ſquints the eye, and makes the Hare‐lippe; Mildewes the white Wheate, and hurts the poore Creature of earth.
- (intransitive) To become tainted with mildew.
Translations
to become tainted with mildew
See also
Middle English
Noun
mildew
- alternative form of myldew