From AmericanSpanishabulón, from an indigenous language of the Monterey Bay area such as Rumsen/Southern Ohloneaūlun(“red abalone”)[1][2]
pink abalone (Haliotis corrugata)abalone (usuallyuncountable,pluralabalones)
- (Canada,US, Australia, Hong Kong) An edibleunivalvemollusc of the genusHaliotis, having a shell lined withmother-of-pearl.[mid 19th c.][3]
- (Canada,US, Australia, Hong Kong) The meat of the aforementioned mollusc.[mid 19th c.]
edible univalve mollusc
- Ainu:アィペ
- Arabic:أُذُن اَلْبَحْر f(ʔuḏun al-baḥr)
- Breton:(singular)(pleaseverify)ourmel (br),(collective noun)(pleaseverify)ourmelenn (br) f
- Catalan:orella de mar f
- Central Sierra Miwok:hásˑyny-,hás·yny-
- Chinese:
- Cantonese:鮑魚 /鲍鱼(baau1 jyu4)
- Hakka:鮑魚 /鲍鱼(pâu-ǹg)
- Hokkien:鮑魚 /鲍鱼(pau-hî, pau-hû)
- Mandarin:鮑魚 /鲍鱼 (zh)(bàoyú),石決明 /石决明 (zh)(shíjuémíng),鰒魚 /鳆鱼 (zh)(fùyú)(archaic)
- Dutch:zeeoor,abalone m
- Esperanto:halioto
- Finnish:merikorva (fi),abaloni (fi)
- French:ormeau (fr) m,haliotide (fr) f
- Galician:peneira (gl) f,orella de mar f
- German:Abalone (de) f,Meerohr n,Seeohr (de) n
- Greek:αυτί της θάλασσας f(aftí tis thálassas)
- Hindi:कर्णशुक्ति f(karṇaśukti)
- Icelandic:sæeyra
- Indonesian:mata tujuh,kerang mata tujuh(literally“seven-eyed clam”),abalone (id)
- Irish:cluas mhara f
- Italian:abalone,orecchia di mare
- Japanese:鮑 (ja)(あわび, awabi),アワビ (ja)(awabi)
- Korean:전복 (ko)(jeonbok)
- Malay:
- Jawi:ابالوني
- Rumi:abalone (ms)
- Maori:pāua,marapeka
- Persian:گوش دریا(guš daryâ)
- Polish:słuchotka f,ucho morskie n
- Portuguese:haliote (pt) m,abalone (pt) m
- Russian:абало́н (ru) m(abalón),галио́тис m(galiótis),морско́е у́шко n(morskóje úško)
- Scottish Gaelic:cluas-mhara f
- Spanish:oreja de mar f,abulón (es) m,loco (es) m
- Swedish:havsöra (sv) n,abalone,öronsnäcka (sv) c
- Tagalog:kabibing-tainga
- Thai:หอยเป๋าฮื้อ(hɔ̌i-bpǎo-hʉ́ʉ)
- Turkish:denizkulağı (tr)
- Vietnamese:bào ngư (vi)
- Wappo:híle
- Welsh:clust fôr f
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- ^“abalone”, inDictionary.com Unabridged,Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- ^“abalone”, inMerriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.:Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- ^Lesley Brown, editor-in-chief, William R. Trumble and Angus Stevenson, editors (2002), “abalone”, inThe Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles, 5th edition, Oxford, New York, N.Y.:Oxford University Press,→ISBN, page 1.
Borrowed fromEnglishabalone, borrowed in the mid-20th century.
abalone m (pluralabalones)
- (cooking, uncommon) the abalone
FromEnglishabalone, from AmericanSpanishabulón, from an indigenous language of the Monterey Bay area such as Rumsen (Southern Ohloneaūlun(“red abalone”).
- IPA(key): [a.ba.lo.ne]
- Rhymes:-ne,-e
- Hyphenation:a‧ba‧lo‧ne
abalone (Jawi spellingابالوني,pluralabalone-abalone)
- abalone(edible univalve mollusc)