Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A plant (Zingiber officinale) of tropical Southeast Asia having yellowish-green flowers and a pungent aromatic rhizome.
- noun The rhizome of this plant, often dried and powdered and used as a spice.
- noun Any of several related plants having variously colored, often fragrant flowers.
- noun Wild ginger.
- noun A strong brown.
- noun Informal Spirit and liveliness; vigor.
- transitive verb To spice with ginger.
- transitive verb Informal To make lively.
from The Century Dictionary.
- Brittle; tender; delicate.
- noun In the West Indies, any one of several species belonging to the genera Costus and Alpinia (Renealmia of many authors).
- To put some ‘ginger’ into (a person); shake up; revive.
- noun The rhizome, and also the light-yellow substance of the rhizome, of Zingiber officinale a reed-like perennial plant with annual leafy stems 3 or 4 feet high, and flowers in conical spikes borne on distinct leafless stems.
- Made of or flavored with ginger.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Bot.) A plant of the genus Zingiber, of the East and West Indies. The species most known is
Zingiber officinale . - noun The hot and spicy rootstock of
Zingiber officinale , which is much used in cookery and in medicine. - noun See ginger beer, below.
- noun a mild beer impregnated with ginger.
- noun a liquor made from ginger, raisins, lemon rind, and water, and sometimes whisky or brandy.
- noun See Ginger ale (above).
- noun wine impregnated with ginger.
- noun (Bot.) an American herb (
Asarum Canadense ) with two reniform leaves and a long, cordlike rootstock which has a strong taste of ginger.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun UK, Cockney rhyming slang a
homosexual . - adjective UK, Cockney rhyming slang
homosexual . - verb To
move gingerly . - noun Any plant of a genus (
Zingiber , especially Zingiber officinale) of tropical Asiatic and Polynesianherbs of a family (Zingiberaceae , the ginger family) with pungent aromatic rhizomes used as a condiment and as astimulant andacarminative . - noun The rhizome of this plant used as a
spice either as it is or in dried powdered form. - noun A reddish-brown colour/color.
- noun colloquial, countable A person with reddish-brown hair; a
redhead . - noun colloquial, uncountable
vitality ,vigour ,liveliness (of character) - adjective Of a reddish-brown colour.
- adjective flavoured with ginger.
- verb To add ginger to.
- verb To
enliven , tospice (up).
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun liveliness and energy
- adjective (used especially of hair or fur) having a bright orange-brown color
- verb add ginger to in order to add flavor
- noun dried ground gingerroot
- noun perennial plants having thick branching aromatic rhizomes and leafy reedlike stems
- noun pungent rhizome of the common ginger plant; used fresh as a seasoning especially in Asian cookery
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
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Examples
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Take ginger bread for example: The real _ginger_ taste is there.
The Story of Crisco Marion Harris Neil
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Log in to Reply sinbin2 (UID#2039) on August 31st, 2009 at 6: 07 pm and a ginger is born.
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The nature of ginger is warming and its flavor is aromatic and spicy.
Sat Hon: Tao of Food: Ginger for the Common Cold and Postpartum Recovery Sat Hon 2010
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Spicy-sweet candied ginger is a nice match for the tart, and sometimes bitter, grapefruit juice.
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Any the Supper Inn for Chinese, especially the BBQ suckling pig and steamed oysters in ginger, and Dainty Sichuan for stinking hot chinese.
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The nature of ginger is warming and its flavor is aromatic and spicy.
Sat Hon: Tao of Food: Ginger for the Common Cold and Postpartum Recovery Sat Hon 2010
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The easiest way to peel ginger is to scrape off the peel with the edge of a teaspoon.
Recipe: Moroccan Chermoula and Carrot Soup (Μαροκινή Σούπα με Καρότα) Laurie Constantino 2008
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The easiest way to peel ginger is to scrape off the peel with the edge of a teaspoon.
Archive 2008-03-01 Laurie Constantino 2008
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The easiest way to peel ginger is to scrape off the peel with the edge of a teaspoon.
Archive 2008-02-01 Laurie Constantino 2008
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A certain ginger senior ‘police officer’ who has been the source of controversy over the last few years recently went out with a specialist unit of his large farce.
Stop Press « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG Inspector Gadget 2008
tiggytig commented on the word ginger
gin·ger /ˈdʒɪndʒər/ jin-jer –noun
A person of pale yet muddled (freckled) complexion, therewith born with red, but truthfully bright orange or ginger, colored hair. Although often subclassified as a redhead, this genus is technically a distant relative to the redhaired subspecies of human.
For disambiguation please see Carrot Top, Ron Weasley, and Chucky Finster.
October 22, 2008
pterodactyl commented on the word ginger
So, this word can refer to people, not just to food? Huh. This comes as a surprise to my American ears. It sounds funny to talk about a "ginger" person.
Also, can someone please explain to me whether "ginger", in this sense, is pejorative?
January 28, 2010
bilby commented on the word ginger
Not pejorative in Australia.
January 29, 2010
yarb commented on the word ginger
As a noun it whiffs rather of mockery to my ear. As an adjective describing what in America is called a redhead, no, it's perfectly normal.
January 29, 2010
mollusque commented on the word ginger
It's not usually pejorative, but it can be used pejoratively, just as blonde can (example.)
January 29, 2010
jodi commented on the word ginger
IrE for red hair or (AmE) red-head (i.e. red-headed person)
April 27, 2011
chained_bear commented on the word ginger
As for the spice, and how it was packed for long-distance transport, a note can be found on fondaci. Another on how to determine freshness is on gum arabic. On its famed use in Nuremberg spiced Christmas cakes, see gingerbread. Another interesting note can be found on garbling. Value relative to other spices, sueldos carlines.
November 28, 2017