Broccoli

来自Big Physics

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mid 17th century: from Italian, plural of broccolo ‘cabbage sprout, head’, diminutive of brocco ‘shoot’, based on Latin brocchus, broccus ‘projecting’.


Ety img broccoli.png

wiktionary

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1699, Italian broccoli, plural of broccolo(“cabbage sprout, head”), diminutive of brocco(“shoot, sprout”) (which is also the origin of brocade [1]), from Latin broccus(“pointed, sharp, projecting; buck-toothed”), possibly of Gaulish origin, related to Proto-Celtic *brokkos(“badger”) or Proto-Celtic *brozdos(“tip, point”) (compare Scottish Gaelic brog(“pointed instrument, awl”), Welsh procio(“thrust, poke”), Old English brord(“point, spike”)). More at brochure, brad.


etymonline

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broccoli (n.)

variety of common cabbage with a dense, edible head, 1690s, from Italian broccoli, plural of broccolo "a sprout, cabbage sprout," diminutive of brocco "shoot, protruding tooth, small nail," from Latin broccus (see broach (n.)).