See also: Imbé and imbé

English

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Etymology

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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun

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imbe (plural imbes)

  1. The originally African tree Garcinia livingstonei.
    • 1928, Otis Warren Barrett, The Tropical Crops:
      The danealan, G. subelliptica, is a 30- to 40-foot tree of the eastern coast of Luzon. [...] The imbe has fruited in southern Florida, but probably it is too exacting in its ecological requirements for general cultivation.
    • 1944, John MacLaren Waterston, Fruit Culture in Bermuda ...:
      Garcinia livingstonei T. Anders., The Imbe, Guttiferae.
      The Imbe has proved quite hardy and successful on the sandy and limestone rock soils of Southern Florida. The fruit obtained [...]
    • 1960, William Crawford Kennard, H. F. Winters, Some Fruits and Nuts for the Tropics, page 67:
      Figure 46. - The imbe, Garcinia livingstonei.
    • 1993, Tropical Fruit News, page 102:
      Trees grow slowly and this makes them ideal for pot culture; in fact, many people grow imbe as a container tropical fruit for small landscapes. Imbes have separate sexes, so this means you have to have both a male and a female tree ...
    • 1993, James J. Darley, Know and Enjoy Tropical Fruit: Tropical Fruit and Nuts: a Cornucopia, P&S Publishing, →ISBN, page 45:
      Purple mangosteen trees have only female flowers and pollen fertilisation is not required. [...] Other Garcinia species, have less to recommend them as a fruit tree; the imbe (G. livingstonei) is small fruited, has a large seed and a little sour flesh.
    • 2006, Susanna Lyle, Discovering Fruit & Nuts: A Comprehensive Guide to the Cultivation, Uses and Health Benefits of Over 300 Food-Producing Plants:
      (Guttiferae) Relatives: mangosteen
      A native of eastern Africa, the imbe forms an interestingly-shaped tree and has numerous sweet-sub-acid, tasty bright orange fruits, which can be eaten fresh. It is only cultivated locally ...
    • 2008, National Research Council, Policy and Global Affairs, Development, Security, and Cooperation, Lost Crops of Africa: Volume III: Fruits, National Academies Press (→ISBN), page 291:
      Africa's best-known mangosteen relative is the imbe, a tree whose soft and colorful fruits brighten up markets [...]. Imbes come from a shrub or small tree with a dense spreading or conical crown topping a short, often twisted trunk [...]

Translations

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See also

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Anagrams

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Old English

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Etymology

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From Proto-West Germanic *imbī, perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *a(m)pi- (stinging insect, bee). Cognate with Middle Dutch imme (Dutch imme) and Old High German imbi (German Imme). The proposed Indo-European root would also be the source of Ancient Greek ἐμπίς (empís), Latin apis.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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imbe n

  1. swarm of bees

Usage notes

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Only attested in late form ymbe.

Old Irish

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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imbe n (genitive imbi)

  1. verbal noun of im·fen
  2. fence

Inflection

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Neuter io-stem
Singular Dual Plural
Nominative imbeN imbeL imbeL
Vocative imbeN imbeL imbeL
Accusative imbeN imbeL imbeL
Genitive imbiL imbeL imbeN
Dative imbiuL imbib imbib
Initial mutations of a following adjective:
  • H = triggers aspiration
  • L = triggers lenition
  • N = triggers nasalization

Mutation

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Mutation of imbe
radical lenition nasalization
imbe
(pronounced with /h/ in h-prothesis environments)
unchanged n-imbe

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Further reading

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