swede

See also: Swede
A swede.

English

Etymology 1

From the earlier term Swedish turnip, because the Swedes introduced the plant to the English in the 1700s.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /swiːd/
  • (file)
  • Homophone: Swede

Noun

swede (plural swedes)

  1. (chiefly Britain) The fleshy yellow root of a variety of rape, Brassica napus var. napobrassica, resembling a large turnip, grown as a vegetable.
  2. The plant from which this is obtained.
  3. (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England) The turnip.
  4. (Britain, slang) The head.
    • 2005, The Spectator (volume 299, page 49)
      Gotta be so careful nowadays; local copper's no problem but the cow from the council done me 'cos this almost brained a punter when it fell on his swede.
Synonyms
  • (plant): rutabaga (US, Canada)
  • (vegetable): rutabaga (US, Canada), neep (Scotland), yellow turnip (US), winter turnip
Translations

Etymology 2

Coined by Michel Gondry in the film Be Kind Rewind, from the claim that films produced in this way were imported from Sweden.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /swiːd/
  • Homophone: Swede

Verb

swede (third-person singular simple present swedes, present participle sweding, simple past and past participle sweded)

  1. To produce a low-budget remake of a film without the use of professional actors or filming techniques.

Anagrams

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