nectar - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Latin nectar, from Ancient Greek νέκταρ (néktar, “nourishment of the gods”), from Proto-Indo-European *neḱ- (“perish, disappear”) + *-tr̥h₂ (“overcoming”), from *terh₂- (“to overcome, pass through, cross over”).
nectar (countable and uncountable, plural nectars)
- (chiefly mythology) The drink of the gods. [from 16th c.]
- (by extension) Any delicious drink, now especially a type of sweetened fruit juice. [from 16th c.]
- (botany) The sweet liquid secreted by flowers to attract pollinating insects and birds. [from 17th c.]
drink of the gods
- Albanian: menjë (sq) f
- Assamese: অমিয়া (omia)
- Bulgarian: нектар (bg) m (nektar)
- Burmese: သုဓာ (su.dha), နတ်သုဓာ (natsu.dha)
- Catalan: nèctar (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Czech: nektar (cs) m
- Danish: nektar (da) c
- Dutch: nectar (nl) m, nektar m
- Estonian: nektar (et)
- Finnish: nektari (fi)
- Galician: néctar (gl) m
- Georgian: ნექტარი (nekṭari)
- German: Nektar (de) m
- Greek: νέκταρ (el) n (néktar)
- Ancient: νέκταρ n (néktar)
- Hungarian: istenek itala, nektár (hu)
- Irish: neachtar m
- Italian: nettare (it) m
- Japanese: (please verify) 神酒 (ja) (みき, miki), (please verify) 神酒 (ja) (しんしゅ, shinshu)
- Norwegian:
- Persian: نوش (fa) (nuš)
- Polish: nektar (pl) m
- Portuguese: néctar (pt) m, néctar dos deuses m
- Romanian: nectar (ro) n
- Russian: некта́р (ru) m (nektár)
- Spanish: néctar (es) m
- Swedish: nektar (sv) c
- Turkish: nektar (tr)
- Welsh: neithdar m
sweet liquid secreted by flowers
- Albanian: menjë (sq) f, mjalcë (sq) f
- Arabic: رَحِيق m (raḥīq)
- Assamese: অমিয়া (omia)
- Bikol Central: duga
- Bulgarian: нектар (bg) m (nektar)
- Burmese: ပန်းဝတ်ရည် (my) (pan:watrany)
- Catalan: nèctar (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Czech: nektar (cs) m
- Danish: nektar (da) c
- Dutch: nectar (nl) m, nektar m
- Erzya: улаз (ulaz)
- Esperanto: nektaro
- Estonian: nektar (et), õienektar (et), neste (et), mesineste (et), õiemahl (et), mesimahl (et)
- Finnish: mesi (fi)
- Galician: néctar (gl) m
- Georgian: ნექტარი (nekṭari)
- German: Nektar (de) m
- Greek: νέκταρ (el) n (néktar)
- Hebrew: צוף (he) m (tsuf)
- Hungarian: virágméz (hu)
- Ido: nektaro (io)
- Ingrian: mesi, meto
- Irish: neachtar m
- Italian: nettare (it) m
- Japanese: 花蜜 (ja) (かみつ, kamitsu)
- Maori: waihonga, ngongo
- Navajo: chʼilátah baa hózhónii bijeeh
- Norwegian:
- Persian: شهد (fa) (šahd)
- Polish: nektar (pl) m
- Portuguese: néctar (pt) m
- Romanian: nectar (ro) n
- Russian: некта́р (ru) m (nektár)
- Spanish: néctar (es) m
- Swahili: mbochi (sw) class 9, nekta class 9
- Swedish: nektar (sv) c
- Turkish: bal özü (tr)
- Welsh: neithdar m
any delicious drink
- Albanian: menjë (sq) f
- Bulgarian: нектар (bg) m (nektar)
- Catalan: nèctar (ca) m
- Danish: nektar (da) c, saftevand n
- Dutch: nectar (nl) m, nektar m
- Estonian: nektar (et), neste (et)
- Finnish: nektari (fi), linnunmaito (fi), mehu (fi)
- German: Nektar (de) m
- Greek: νέκταρ (el) n (néktar)
- Hungarian: nektár (hu)
- Irish: neachtar m
- Italian: nettare (it) m
- Japanese: 美酒 (ja) (びしゅ, bishu)
- Persian: نکتار (nektâr), نوش (fa) (nuš)
- Polish: nektar (pl) m
- Portuguese: néctar dos deuses m
- Romanian: nectar (ro) n
- Russian: некта́р (ru) m (nektár)
- Swedish: nektar (sv) c
Translations to be checked
- Esperanto: (please verify) nektaro
- French: (please verify) nectar (fr) m
- Hebrew: (please verify) צוף (he) m (tsuf)
- Ido: (please verify) nektaro (io)
- Italian: (1,2,3) (please verify) nettare (it) m
- Japanese: (please verify) 花蜜 (ja) (かみつ, kamitsu) (liquid secreted by flowers), (please verify) 蜜 (ja)
- Lithuanian: (please verify) nektaras
- Mandarin: (please verify) 花蜜 (zh) (huāmì) (liquid secreted by flowers)
- Spanish: (please verify) néctar (es) m
- Swedish: (please verify) nektar (sv) c
- Telugu: (please verify) మకరందం (te) (makarandaṁ)
- Turkish: (please verify) nektar (tr)
nectar (third-person singular simple present nectars, present participle nectaring, simple past and past participle nectared)
- (intransitive) To feed on nectar.
2010, Robert Michael Pyle, Mariposa Road: The First Butterfly Big Year, page 123:
On the lane below, more orangetips nectared on spring beauties and violets.
- Douglas Harper (2001–2025) “nectar”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
nectar m (plural nectars)
- (Greek mythology, Roman mythology) nectar, beverage drunk by the Olympians
- Synonym: godendrank
- Coordinate term: ambrozijn
- (botany, insects) nectar, liquid produced by flowers
From Latin nectar, from Ancient Greek νέκταρ (néktar), from Proto-Indo-European *néḱtr̥h₂, derived from the roots *neḱ- (“to perish, disappear”) and *terh₂- (“to overcome”).
nectar m (plural nectars)
- nectar (all meanings)
- → Turkish: nektar
- “nectar”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈnek.tar/, [ˈnɛkt̪är]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈnek.tar/, [ˈnɛkt̪är]
From Ancient Greek νέκταρ (néktar), from Proto-Indo-European *néḱ-tr̥h₂, derived from the roots *neḱ- (“to perish”) and *terh₂- (“to overcome”).
nectar n sg (genitive nectaris); third declension
Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem), singular only.
- “nectar”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “nectar”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- “nectar”, in Harry Thurston Peck, editor (1898), Harper's Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, New York: Harper & Brothers
- “nectar”, in William Smith, editor (1848), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London: John Murray
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
nectar
Borrowed from Ancient Greek νέκταρ (néktar) or French nectar.
nectar n (plural nectaruri)