greengage

Etymology
.

The legend goes that, had a shipment of plums from France, in which the labels of the got lost, by which reason his gardener called it after his master. Horticulturist reports in his notes edited by L. W. Dillwyn in 1843, page 60: I was on a visit to Sir William Gage, at, near Bury; he was then near 70; he told me that he first brought over, from France, the Grosse reine Claude, and introduced it into England, and in compliment to him the Plum was called the Green Gage; this was about the year 1725. Contrary to the common story however here the French name is known to the baronet, and it could consequentially completely be a running joke, in that he exploited a coincidental likeness of his name to a plant name to become part of history. An older term denoting the very same plum cultivar, which ultimately derives from the Near East, via the under, is found in

Noun

 * 1) A plum cultivar with greenish-yellow flesh and skin,.

Translations

 * Arabic: جَانَرِك
 * Gulf Arabic: كوجة
 * Bulgarian: ренглота
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech:
 * Finnish: viherluumu
 * French:
 * Georgian: რენკლოდი
 * German:
 * Greek: πράσινο δαμάσκηνο
 * Hungarian:
 * Irish: glasphluma
 * Italian: verdacchio
 * Luxembourgish: Réngglott
 * Persian:
 * Polish:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: claudia
 * Turkish: