Brinjal Etymology
Fruit of the eggplant Solanum esculentum 1775 from French aubergine from Catalan alberginera showing typical change of al- to au- in French from Arabic al-badinjan the eggplant source also of Spanish alberengena 15c from Persian badin-gan from Sanskrit vatigagama. Sanskrit word is likely of origin from the source that also ultimately gave English aubergine.
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Hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable.

Brinjal etymology. Turns out that it came to English in the early 1700s from India where the fabric was called sirsakar in Hindi. Aubergine n hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable. In India and Africa another name for aubergine.
Brin jal or egg plant Solanum melongena L is one of the most com mon pop u lar veg e ta ble crop grown in al most world wide. In dia is con sid ered to be the cen tre of or i gin of cul ti vated brin jal from where it spread to the other parts of the world Chaudhury and Kalda 2. Ive always wanted to straighten this matter out even though it probably seems insignificant to most people.
Legend holds that this word broken up literally means fart go away. And indeed brinjal comes to Malay from Portuguese. Brinjal Noun An aubergine or eggplant.
But this aint true. In India it has in the past been called brinjal a word which comes from the same. The story begins somewhere in India near Burma.
That word had reached Arabic through Persian from the Sanskrit vatimgana which indicates how long it has been cultivated in India. According to Ina Lipkowitz PhD the etymology of its northern European name reads like a whos who of early marauders. Etymology of brinjal This etymology says that the India English term derives via French Catalan Spanish Arabic Persian from Sanskrit.
Forum discussions with the word s brinjal in the. But this aint true. Eggplant brinjal eggplant bush garden egg mad apple Solanum melongena.
The French and the British copying the French call eggplants aubergine which is derived from the Sanskrit word vatinganah literally anti-wind vegetable. From India the purple perennial travelled west and became badinjāna Persian and الباذنجان al-badhinjān. That name was taken from the Persian shir o shakkar which meant milk and sugar in reference to the alternating stripes and textures - the milk stripe is smooth while the sugar stripe is coarse.
The vegetable in question is native to southern India where it was originally known as vatinganah in Sanskrit. Posts about brinjal etymology written by Aneela Mirchandani. Legend holds that this word broken up literally means fart go away.
From India the purple perennial travelled west and became badinjāna Persian and الباذنجان al-badhinjān. Before the Sanskrit speakers and even the Dravidian speakers migrated to India it was largely occupied by the Munda peopleRemnants of. From brinjela ultimately from.
In Britain it is usually called an aubergine a name which was borrowed through French and Catalan from its Arabic name al-badinjan. This in turn came from vatin-gana Sanskrit for something to do with the class that removes the wind-disorder windy humour seemingly something to do with the gaseous effects of eggplant consumption. From Portuguese berinjela from Arabic.
The vegetable in question is native to southern India where it was originally known as vatinganah in Sanskrit. I personally know a number of people who in the 70s and 80s used the word G for guy and the word OG for old guy. Hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable.
Aubergine brinjal eggplant bush garden egg mad apple Solanum melongena.
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