cantaloupe

Etymology
From, from , from + lupo, literally "howl of the wolf".

Named after a former Papal summer estate near Rome, where the melons were first grown after being introduced to Europe.

Noun

 * 1) A melon of species  with sweet orange flesh, with numerous cultivars in several cultivar groups.
 * 2)  Smooth-skinned, also known as, found in the Middle East and also grown in Europe.
 * 3)  Having a rough skin resembling netting; also known as muskmelon or rockmelon.
 * 4) An orange colour, like that of cantaloupe flesh.

Translations

 * Afrikaans:
 * Aklanon: atimon
 * Albanian:
 * Apache:
 * Western Apache: bilóń
 * Arabic:
 * Egyptian Arabic: كنتالوب
 * Gulf Arabic: بطيخ
 * Hijazi Arabic: شَمَّام
 * Moroccan Arabic: سويهلة, بطيخ
 * Armenian:
 * Aromanian: piponj
 * Assamese: বাঙী, চিৰাল
 * Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܓܸܢܕܘܼܪܵܐ
 * Bulgarian: канталуп
 * Catalan: meló cantalup
 * Cheyenne: mȧhōō'o, mȧhōhko
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 皺皮瓜, 香瓜
 * Mandarin: 羅馬甜瓜,
 * Danish: kantalup
 * Dutch: kantaloep,
 * Esperanto: kantalupo
 * Finnish: verkkomeloni
 * French:
 * Georgian: ნესვი, დასტამბო
 * German: Cantaloupe-Melone
 * Greek:
 * Hungarian:
 * Icelandic: kantalúpmelóna, cantaloup-melóna
 * Ido: ,
 * Irish: cantalúp
 * Italian: cantalupo,
 * Japanese:
 * Korean:
 * Kurdish:
 * Central Kurdish: گِڕکە
 * Kyrgyz:
 * Lenape: panshpèkw
 * Malayalam: ഷമാം
 * Maltese: bettieħ
 * Maori:
 * Navajo: taʼneeskʼání
 * Northern Sotho: sespansepeke
 * Persian: ,
 * Polish: kantalupa
 * Portuguese: meloa, cantalupo
 * Quechua: lakawiti
 * Romanian:
 * Russian: ,
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: диња, церовача, канталупа
 * Roman:, ,
 * Slovene:
 * Spanish: cantalupo
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog: melong bato, kantalupo
 * Thai: แคนตาลูป
 * Tigrinya: ሓብሓብ
 * Tongan: katiu
 * Turkish: kantalup kavunu
 * Yiddish: דינקע

Etymology
From, from.