nightshade

Etymology
From, , , from , corresponding to. Compare 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) Any of the poisonous plants belonging to the genus, especially black nightshade or woody nightshade.
 * 2)  Any plant of the wider  family, including the nightshades as well as tomato, potato, eggplant, and deadly nightshade.
 * 3) Belladonna or deadly nightshade,.
 * 4) Any of several plants likened to nightshade, usually because of similar dark-colored berries.
 * 5) Wind that blows from where the sun rises.
 * 6)  Hot and suffocating wind, wherever is its course.
 * 1)  Hot and suffocating wind, wherever is its course.

Derived terms

 * ( spp.)
 * ( spp.)
 * climbing nightshade
 * ( spp.)
 * ( spp.)
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * climbing nightshade
 * ( spp.)
 * ( spp.)
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * ( spp.)
 * ( spp.)
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * ( spp.)
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * ( spp.)
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * prickly nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade
 * stinking nightshade

Translations

 * Albanian:
 * Armenian:
 * Bulgarian: кучешко грозде
 * Catalan: morella
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 茄屬植物
 * Czech:
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: solano
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German:
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: στρύχνον
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Irish: lus na hoíche
 * Latin: sōlānum, loba
 * Lithuanian: kiauliauogė
 * Macedonian: зрнец
 * Maori: raupeti, remuroa
 * Old English: hundesberle
 * Polish:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: solanácea
 * Swedish: nattskatta, potatisväxt
 * Ukrainian: паслі́н, пасльо́н
 * Vietnamese: