English
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French nutrition, from Old French nutricion, from Latin nutritio.
Pronunciation
- (UK) enPR: nyo͞o-trĭshʹ-ən, IPA(key): /njuːˈtɹɪʃ.ən/
- (US, Canada) enPR: no͞o-trĭshʹ-ən, nyo͞o-trĭshʹ-ən, IPA(key): /nuˈtɹɪʃ.ən/, /njuˈtɹɪʃ.ən/
| Audio (US); [njuˈtɹɪʃ.ən]: | | (file) |
- (General Australian) enPR: nyo͞o-trĭshʹ-ən, IPA(key): /njʉːˈtɹɪʃ.ən/
- Rhymes: -ɪʃən
Noun
nutrition (usually uncountable, plural nutritions)
- (biology) The organic process by which an organism assimilates food and uses it for growth and maintenance.
1822, John Barclay, chapter I, in An Inquiry Into the Opinions, Ancient and Modern, Concerning Life and Organization[1], Edinburgh, London: Bell & Bradfute; Waugh & Innes; G. & W. B. Whittaker, section I, page 2:In the dead state all is apparently without motion. No agent within indicates design, intelligence, or foresight: there is no respiration; no digestion, circulation, or nutrition; […]
2016 September 16, Hailey Middlebrook, “Should you really feed a cold and starve a fever?”, in CNN[2]:Proper nutrition – and even more important, proper hydration – is crucial in preventing and recovering from both fevers and colds.
- That which nourishes; nutriment.
I accidentally ate a worm which was in my apple - my uncle said the extra nutrition would do me good.
Derived terms
Translations
nutrition
- Albanian: ushqim (sq) m
- Arabic: تَغْذِيَة (ar) f (taḡḏiya), غِذَاء m (ḡiḏāʔ), إِطْعَام m (ʔiṭʕām), اِغْتِذَاء m (iḡtiḏāʔ)
- Armenian: սնուցում (hy) (snucʻum)
- Azerbaijani: qidalanma, qida (az)
- Belarusian: харчава́нне n (xarčavánnje)
- Bengali: গেজা (bn) (geza)
- Bulgarian: хра́нене (bg) n (hránene)
- Burmese: အာဟာရ (my) (ahara.)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 營養 / 营养 (jing4 joeng5)
- Hokkien: 營養 / 营养 (zh-min-nan) (îng-ióng)
- Mandarin: 營養 / 营养 (zh) (yíngyǎng)
- Czech: výživa (cs) f
- Danish: ernæring
- Dutch: voeding (nl) f
- Estonian: toitumine
- Finnish: ravitsemus (fi)
- French: nutrition (fr) f
- Galician: nutrición (gl) f
- Georgian: კვება (ḳveba)
- German: Ernährung (de) f, Nahrung (de) f, Nutrition (de) f
- Greek: διατροφή (el) (diatrofí), θρέψη (el) f (thrépsi)
- Hebrew: תְּזוּנָה f (t'zuná)
- Hindi: पोषण (hi) m (poṣaṇ), खाद्य (hi) m (khādya), खाना (hi) m (khānā)
- Hungarian: táplálás (hu)
- Icelandic: næring (is) f
- Indonesian: nutrisi (id), gizi (id)
- Irish: oiliúint f
- Italian: nutrizione (it) f
- Japanese: 営養 (ja) (えいよう, eiyō), 栄養 (ja) (えいよう, eiyō)
- Kazakh: тамақтандыру (tamaqtandyru), азықтану (azyqtanu), тамақтану (tamaqtanu)
- Korean: 영양 (ko) (yeong'yang)
- Kyrgyz: азыктандыруу (azıktandıruu), азыктануу (ky) (azıktanuu), тоюттандыруу (ky) (toyuttandıruu), тоюттануу (toyuttanuu)
- Latvian: uzturs m
- Lithuanian: mityba f
- Macedonian: исхрана f (ishrana), прехрана f (prehrana)
- Malayalam: പോഷണം (ml) (pōṣaṇaṁ)
- Maori: taioranga
- Norwegian: ernæring (no)
- Persian: تغذیه (fa) (taġziye), غذا (fa) (ġazâ)
- Polish: żywienie (pl) n, pożywienie (pl) n, odżywianie (pl) n
- Portuguese: nutrição (pt) f
- Romanian: nutrire (ro), nutriție (ro) f
- Russian: пита́ние (ru) n (pitánije)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: и̏схрана f, пре̏храна f
- Roman: ȉshrana (sh) f, prȅhrana (sh) f
- Slovak: výživa f
- Slovene: prehrana (sl) f
- Spanish: nutrición (es) f
- Swedish: näring (sv), näringslära
- Tagalog: nutrisyon, paniyahan, paniya
- Tajik: ғизо (tg) (ġizo), хӯрок (tg) (xürok), тағзия (taġziya)
- Thai: โภชนาการ (th) (poo-chá-naa-gaan)
- Turkish: beslenme (tr)
- Turkmen: iýmitlenmek
- Ukrainian: харчува́ння n (xarčuvánnja)
- Uzbek: boqish (uz), oziqlanish
- Vietnamese: sự dinh dưỡng, dinh dưỡng (vi)
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Further reading
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin nūtrītiōnem, from Latin nūtriōnem.
Pronunciation
Noun
nutrition f (plural nutritions)
- nutrition
Further reading
Interlingua
Noun
nutrition (uncountable)
- nutrition