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MEDIUM FOR ESCULENT BASIDIOMYCETES AND FUNCTIONAL FOOD例文帳に追加
食用担子菌類用培地及び機能性食品 - 特許庁
There seaweeds are fit for food―good to eat―edible―esculent.発音を聞く 例文帳に追加
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Wiktionary英語版での「esculent」の意味 |
esculent
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/06/18 20:23 UTC 版)
語源
Learned borrowing from Latin ēsculentus (“fit for eating, eatable, edible; good to eat, delicious; nourishing; full of food”) + English -ent (suffix forming adjectives with the sense of causing, doing, or promoting a certain action). Ēsculentus is derived from ēsca (“food; dish prepared for the table; bait”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁ed- (“to eat”)) + -ulentus (suffix meaning ‘abounding in, full of’ forming adjectives).
発音
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA: /ˈɛskjʊlənt/
- (General American) IPA: /ˈɛskjələnt/
- ハイフネーション: es‧cul‧ent
形容詞
esculent (comparative more esculent, superlative most esculent) (formal)
- Suitable for eating; eatable, edible.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:edible
- Antonyms: inesculent; see also Thesaurus:inedible
- Coordinate terms: drinkable, (obsolete) poculent, potable
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1859 November 24, Charles Darwin, “Variation under Domestication”, in On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, […], London: John Murray, […], →OCLC, page 15:
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1992, W. Harris, P[eter] B[rian] Heenan, “Domestication of the New Zealand Flora—an Alternative View”, in Sandra Stanislawek, editor, New Zealand Journal of Crop and Horticultural Science, volume 20, number 3, Wellington: Scientific and Industrial Research Publishing of New Zealand, Royal Society of New Zealand, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 257, column 1:
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Biogeographical factors, particularly the absence of an indigenous land mammal fauna and a mild oceanic climate, are suggested as the reasons why the New Zealand flora has not provided significant esculent plants.
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2004, Michael Walter Charney, “Esculent Bird’s Nest, Tin, and Fish: The Overseas Chinese and Their Trade in the Eastern Bay of Bengal (Coastal Burma) during the First Half of the Nineteenth Century”, in Wang Gungwu, Ng Chin-keong, editors, Maritime China in Transition 1750–1850 (South China and Maritime Asia; 12), Wiesbaden, Hesse: Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 248:
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From the early 1820s, evidence emerges for Chinese activities in coastal Burma's esculent bird's nest trade. Swallows along the Burmese coasts, as elsewhere, made these edible nests in rocky crags, often on hilly islands (especially available in the Mergui Archipelago and the Tavoy Islands). Made of a glutinous secretion from the bird, these translucent nests would then be gathered and sold for shipment to Chinese markets, where they were considered a tasty delicacy.
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- (figuratively) “Good enough to eat”; attractive.
派生語
- esculentin
- esculent swallow
- inesculent
名詞
esculent (plural esculents) (formal)
- Something edible, especially a vegetable; a comestible.
- Synonyms: eatable, edible, (archaic) victual; see also Thesaurus:food
- Coordinate terms: drinkable, (obsolete) poculent, potable
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1631, Francis [Bacon], “V. Century. [Experiments in Consort, Touching the Melioration of Fruits, Trees, and Plants.]”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries. […], 3rd edition, London: […] William Rawley […]; [p]rinted by J[ohn] H[aviland] for William Lee […], →OCLC, paragraph 474, page 118:
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[T]here is a double Vſe of this Cutting off the Leaues: For in Plants, where the Root is the Eſculent, as Radiſh, and Parſnips, it will make the Root the greater: And ſo it will doe to the Heads of Onions. And where the Fruit is the Eſculent, by Strengthening the Root, it will make the Fruit alſo the greater.
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1705 February 14, Edward Baynard, “To Dr. Edward Baynard”, in John Floyer, Edward Baynard, ΨΥΧΡΟΛΟΥΣΊΑ [Psychrolousía]: Or, The History of Cold-bathing, Both Ancient and Modern. […], 6th edition, London: […] W. Innys and R. Manby, […], published 1732, →OCLC, part II, page 329:
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I am of the Opinion that Man is not a drinking (becauſe not a carnivorous) Animal, at leaſt no more than a Rabbet, or Sheep, forc'd to it when the Graſs is Sunburnt, parch'd and dry; for if we liv'd as did the Antediluvians, on Fruits, Roots and Herbs, &c. thoſe Eſculents had Moiſture and Succulency enough to abate, (or rather to prevent) Thirſt.
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1843, J[ohn] W[hitchurch] Bennett, chapter XVIII, in Ceylon and Its Capabilities; an Account of Its Natural Resources, Indigenous Productions, and Commercial Facilities; […], London: W[illia]m H. Allen and Co., […], published 1998, →OCLC, pages 148–149:
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The Brinjal (Solanum Melongena, L.) includes the Egg-shaped, Green, and Purple varieties, and is so generally esteemed, throughout India, among the very best of table esculents, that no description of mine can add to its praise. […] Nevertheless, this nutritious esculent, although everywhere plentiful in Spain and Portugal, is never to be procured, except of the egg variety, in Covent Garden or other English markets, and then only in flower-pots;—this is the more strange, because the numerous families from the East and West Indies, would ensure a profitable sale of it, by the speculative gardener.
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2010, Verena Winiwarter, “The Art of Making the Earth Fruitful: Medieval and Early Modern Improvements of Soil Fertility”, in Scott G[ordon] Bruce, editor, Ecologies and Economies in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: Studies in Environmental History for Richard C. Hoffmann (Brill’s Series in the History of the Environment; 1), Leiden, Boston, Mass.: Brill, →ISBN, →ISSN, part 1 (Premodern People and the Natural World), page 104:
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Earth that opens in chasms is altogether useless; and that which is rough can neither support the plants, nor does it afford the circulation of water. Some rough and sandy situations are well adapted to esculents, nonetheless. These soils have plenty of nutritive mould, by which the roots are nourished.
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- (mycology, specifically) An edible mushroom.
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1887 January, W. G. S., “Text-book of British Fungi. By W. De Lisle Hay [i.e., William Delisle Hay], F.R.G.S. Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey & Co. [book review]”, in James Britten, editor, The Journal of Botany, British and Foreign, volume XXV, London: West, Newman & Co., […], →OCLC, page 121:
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In a raw state, a piece the size of a pea of either of the three fungi above-mentioned, if placed on the tongue, would cause intolerable agony. Possibly if well cooked some of the poisonous principles might vanish, but we question whether such species should be mentioned amongst esculents in a popular book, simply because a wild "Russian" could eat some of the plants mentioned, possibly to the accompaniment of a draught of rancid train-oil. Some of the so-called esculents are tough subjects, as Polysporus squamosus and P. fomentarius; we venture to say that if anyone should succeed in getting a slice of the first into his inside it would be a matter of surprise to his friends if he ever got a slice of anything else in.
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参考
参照
- ^ “esculent, adj. and n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1891; “esculent, adj. and n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
アナグラム
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