dragon fruit

Etymology
From ; most likely a calque or literal translation of a term in a Southeast Asian language (compare 🇨🇬. Initial English texts cite 🇨🇬; however, this was constructed differently, being a Sino-Vietnamese term for "" re-used to reference the green, "unripe" color of the fruit. First attributed in 1963.

Noun

 * 1) The fruit of certain cacti of the genus ( (syn. ) spp.), cultivated in Southeast Asia and Central and South America, having cerise-pink- or yellow-coloured skin and a white or pink sweet fleshy interior with black seeds.

Translations

 * Afrikaans: draakvrug, pitaja
 * Arabic: فَاكِهَة تِنِّين
 * Bengali: পিতায়া
 * Bulgarian:
 * Burmese: နဂါးမောက်, နဂါးမောက်သီး
 * Central Huasteca Nahuatl: chacha
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 火龍果
 * Hakka: 火龍果
 * Hokkien: 火龍果
 * Mandarin: ,
 * Dutch: drakenvrucht, pitaya
 * Esperanto: drakofrukto
 * Finnish:, pitaya
 * French:, ,
 * Galician:
 * German:, , Pitaya
 * Greek: φρούτο του δράκου
 * Gujarati: ડ્રેગનફ્રુટ, પિતાયા
 * Hungarian: pitaja
 * Indonesian: buah naga
 * Irish: dragantoradh
 * Italian: frutto del drago
 * Japanese: ドラゴンフルーツ, ピタヤ
 * Javanese: woh naga
 * Kannada: ಡ್ರ್ಯಾಗನ್ ಹಣ್ಣು
 * Kazakh: питахайя
 * Khmer: ស្រការនាគ, ស្រកានាគ
 * Korean: 용과, 피타야
 * Lak: питайя
 * Lao: ໝາກມັງກອນ
 * Latvian: pitaija
 * Lü: ᦶᦂᧁᧉᦙᧂᦂᦸᧃ
 * Malay:
 * Malayalam: ഡ്രാഗൺ പഴം
 * Mari:
 * Western Mari: питайя
 * Mongolian: луу жимс
 * Nahuatl:
 * Central Huasteca Nahuatl: chacha
 * Classical Nahuatl: tzaponochtli
 * Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl: chacha
 * Western Huasteca Nahuatl: chacha
 * Polish: ,
 * Portuguese: pitaia, rainha-da-noite,
 * Russian:, , , драко́ний фрукт
 * Slovene: pitaja
 * Spanish: fruta del dragón,
 * Sundanese: buah naga
 * Swedish:, pitaya,
 * Tagalog: pitaya
 * Tamil: டிராகன் பழம்
 * Telugu: పిటాయ
 * Thai: แก้วมังกร
 * Tulu: ಡ್ರ್ಯಾಗನ್ ಪರ್‌ಂದ್
 * Turkish: pitaya
 * Udmurt: питайя
 * Ukrainian: пітахайя, пітайя
 * Uyghur:
 * Vietnamese:
 * Wastek: tsatsaʼ
 * Yucatec Maya: woob
 * Zapotec:
 * Isthmus Zapotec: bidxí