tomato
English

A tomato
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish tomate, from a Nahuan language, from Proto-Nahuan *tomatl.
Pronunciation
Noun
tomato (countable and uncountable, plural tomatoes)
- (botany) A widely cultivated plant, Solanum lycopersicum, having edible fruit.
- (cooking) The savory fruit of this plant, red when ripe, treated as a vegetable in horticulture and cooking.
- Synonyms: love apple (informal), wolf's peach (obsolete)
- Meronym: lycopene
- 1990, JSG Trading Corp. v. Tray-Wrap, Inc., 917 F.2d 75 (2d Cir. 1990)
- In common parlance tomatoes are vegetables, as the Supreme Court observed long ago [see Nix v. Hedden 149 U.S. 304, 307, 13 S.Ct. 881, 882, 37 L.Ed. 745 (1893)], although botanically speaking they are actually a fruit. [26 Encyclopedia Americana 832 (Int'l. ed. 1981)]. Regardless of classification, people have been enjoying tomatoes for centuries; even Mr. Pickwick, as Dickens relates, ate his chops in "tomata" sauce.
- A shade of red, the colour of a ripe tomato.
- tomato colour:
- (slang) A desirable-looking woman.
- Lookit the legs on that hot tomato!
- (slang) A stupid act or person.
Derived terms
- Tomato blistering mosaic tymovirus
- beefsteak tomato (US)
- beef tomato (UK)
- canned tomatoes
- cherry tomato
- diced tomatoes
- grape tomato
- heirloom tomato
- italian plum tomato
- italian tomato
- plum tomato
- puréed tomatoes
- roma tomato
- strained tomatoes
- tomato can
- tomato juice
- tomato paste
- tomato purée
- tomato sauce
- tomato soup
- tomayto, tomahto
Related terms
Translations
tomato plant
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fruit
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Chichewa
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /toˈmá.to/
Esperanto
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
- IPA(key): /toˈmato/
- Hyphenation: to‧ma‧to
- Rhymes: -ato
Noun
tomato (accusative singular tomaton, plural tomatoj, accusative plural tomatojn)
- tomato (fruit)
- tomato plant (Solanum lycopersicum)
Tok Pisin
Noun
tomato
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