Triticum aestivum subsp. spelta (Common names)
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Names in common use
- English: spelt
- German: Spelz, Spelzweizen, Dinkel
- Dutch: rijs spelt, duitse spelt
- Swedish: spelt, speltvete
- Danish: spelt
- Norwegian: spelt
- Icelandic:
- French: épeautre, grand épeautre
- Italian: spelta, faricello, grande farro
- Spanish: escanda, escaña, espelta
- Catalan: espelta
- Portuguese: espelta
- Romanian: alac, grîu spelta
- Russian: спелта, пшеница спелта - spelta, pšenica spelta
- Polish: orkisz, pszenica orkisz
- Czech: pšenice špalda
- Slovak: pšenica špaldová
- Bulgarian: пшеница спелта - pšenica spelta
- Croatian: pir, prava pšenica
- Serb:
- Slovenian:
- Latvian:
- Lithuanian:
- Albanian: grurë speltë (gruri with the article)
- Greek:
- Turkish: kızıl buğday, kavuzlu buğday
- Maltese:
- Hungarian: tönköly
- Finnish:
- Estonian:
Sources and commentaries
- French
- Épeautre is the right name, but Triticum monococcum being known as petit épeautre, spelt is often called grand épeautre to avoid confusion. MC
- German
- Spelz (masculine) is spelt, but Spelze (feminine) is a glume. So in German, Spelz tend to designate all hulled wheats (with glumes attached to the grain). This situation may explain the confusion in other languages such as French and Italian. MC
- Italian
- Farro is a generic name for hulled wheats. MC