Difference between revisions of "Panicum miliaceum (Common names)"
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Revision as of 16:09, 20 September 2011
Common names: Triticum aestivum subsp. aestivum
Names in common use
- English: millet, common millet, broomcorn millet, proso millet
- German: Hirse, Rispenhirse, Hirsch
- Dutch: gierst, pluimgierst
- Swedish: hirs
- Danish: hirse
- Norwegian: hirse
- Icelandic:
- French: millet
- Italian: miglio
- Spanish: mijo
- Catalan: panís
- Portuguese: milho miúdo, milho branco
- Romanian: mei
- Russian: просо - proso
- Polish: proso
- Czech: proso
- Slovak: proso
- Bulgarian: просо
- Croatian: proso
- Serb:
- Slovenian: proso
- Albanian: mel (meli with the article), penik
- Greek: κεχρί, κηχρί - kekhri
- Turkish: konak darısı
- Hungarian: köles
- Finnish: hirssi
Sources and commentaries
This was the only milium in classical Latin. In many languages, millet or its equivalents have become a generic name for cereals with small round seeds (except Sorghum bicolor). In English, this generic name includes Pennisetum glaucum, whereas in French, the latter species is distinguished as mil. So, millets in English tranlates into "mil et millets" in French. MC
- Hungarian
- köles, kölös (Borza).
- Portuguese
- Milho has seen its meaning extended through time, not only to Setaria italica, but also to Sorghum bicolor, in Africa to Pennisetum glaucum, and eventually to Zea mays. Without a qualifier, it means now Zea mays.