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Bloom
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
English and Jewish surname converged from several origins:
- Middle English blom (“ingot”), from Old English blōma (“lump of iron”)
- Swedish Blom
- Dutch Bloem, see bloem (“flower”)
- Spelling variant of Blum
Pronunciation
Proper noun
Bloom
- A surname.
- 2023 June 24, Chris Lau and Sara Smart, “‘That could’ve been us,’ say father and son who pulled out of doomed Titan trip out of safety concerns”, in CNN:
- Jay Bloom described the experience of learning what happened to the Titan as “very surreal”.
- A place in the United States:
- A ghost town in Otero County, Colorado.
- An unincorporated community and township in Ford County, Kansas.
- A town in Richland County, Wisconsin.
- A number of other townships, including in Illinois, Kansas (2 or 3), Minnesota, Ohio (5), and Pennsylvania, listed under Bloom Township.
Derived terms
Further reading
- Hanks, Patrick, editor (2003), “Bloom”, in Dictionary of American Family Names, volume 1, New York: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 175.
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German Low German
Etymology
From Middle Low German blôme, from Old Saxon blōmo, from Proto-West Germanic *blōmō. Akin to German Blume, Dutch bloem, Dutch Low Saxon bloom, English bloom, Danish blomme, Swedish blomma; also compare Latin flōs.
Pronunciation
Noun
Bloom f (plural Blomen or Blööm)
- (botany) flower; blossom; bloom
- Insekten hölpt Blomen bi de Reprodukschoon.
- Insects help blooms with reproduction.
- De brede Varietät an Blomensoorten faszineer de Minschen al lang.
- The broad variety of flowersorts has long fascinated Man.
- (chemistry) efflorescence
- (heraldry) flower
- Blomen sind faken en Bestanddeel vun Symbolen op Flaggen un Wapens.
- Flowers are often a building block of symbols on flags and coats of arms.
- De Bloom, wölke England symboliseert, is de rode Roos.
- The flower that symbolizes England is the red rose.
- (hunting) tail, scut (of a hare)
- nose, bouquet (of a wine)
Derived terms
- Blomenstruuß
- Blomenstrüüschen
- Blöömken
Related terms
- Blatt n
- blöhen
- Blööt f
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North Frisian
Alternative forms
- bluum (Föhr-Amrum)
- blööm (Mooring)
Etymology
From Old Frisian blōma, from Proto-West Germanic *blōmō. Cognates include West Frisian blom.
Noun
Bloom m (plural blööme)
Plautdietsch
Etymology
From Middle Low German blôme, from Old Saxon blōmo, from Proto-West Germanic *blōmō.
Noun
Bloom f (plural Bloomen)
Derived terms
- Bloomenbeet
- Bloomenfensta
- Bloomengoaden
- Bloomenknoppen
- Bloomenkomst
- Bloomenkrauns
- Bloomensauft
- Bloomenstoff
- Bloomentopp
- Fenstabloom
- Gaunsebloom
- Glockenbloom
- Goadenbloom
- Katrienkjebloom
- Koobloom
- Monbloom
- Pelzbloom
- Schlangenbloom
- Schlätelbloom
- Sonnenbloom
- Stroobloom
See also
Further reading
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