caule
Italian
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin caulis. See also cavolo.
Noun
caule m (plural cauli)
- (botany) stem (of a herbaceous plant)
Related terms
- acaule
- caulinare
- cavolo
Latin
Adjective
caule
- nominative neuter singular of caulis
- accusative neuter singular of caulis
- vocative neuter singular of caulis
Portuguese
Etymology
From Latin caulis.
Noun
caule m (plural caules)
- (botany) stem (above-ground stalk of a vascular plant)
Related terms
- couve
Yola
Etymology
From Middle English colt, from Old English colt (“young donkey, young camel”), from Proto-Germanic *kultaz (“plump; stump; thick shape, bulb”), from Proto-Indo-European *gelt- (“something round, pregnant belly, child in the womb”), from *gel- (“to ball up, amass”). Cognate with Norwegian kult (“treestump”), Swedish kult (“young boar, boy, lad”). Related to child.
Noun
caule
- a horse