Definition
A tropical tree genus in the citrus family, bearing prickly stems and aromatic leaves, also called 'prickly ash.'
Etymology
From Spanish 'fagara,' derived from Arabic 'farjal.' The word traveled via medieval Spanish-Arabic contact in the Iberian Peninsula, reflecting historical trade and plant knowledge exchange.
Kelly Says
Fagara trees produce a numbing spice similar to Sichuan pepper, and the word's journey from Arabic to Spanish to English shows how plants and their names moved along medieval trade routes centuries before we had formal botanical classification.
Translations
ARالعربية
فاجガラ
fa-ja-gara
CACatalà
fagara
fa-gah-rah
CSČeština
fagara
fa-gah-rah
DADansk
fagara
fa-gah-rah
DEDeutsch
Fagara
fa-gah-rah
ELΕλληνικά
φαγάρα
fa-gah-rah
ESEspañol
fagara
fa-gah-rah
FAفارسی
فagara
fa-gah-rah
FISuomi
fagara
fa-gah-rah
FRFrançais
fagara
fa-gah-ra
HUMagyar
fagara
fa-gah-rah
IDBahasa Indonesia
fagara
fa-gah-rah
ITItaliano
fagara
fa-gah-rah
MSBahasa Melayu
fagara
fa-gah-rah
NLNederlands
fagara
fa-gah-rah
NONorsk
fagara
fa-gah-rah
PLPolski
fagara
fa-gah-rah
PTPortuguês
fagara
fa-gah-rah
RORomână
fagara
fa-gah-rah
RUРусский
фагара
fa-gah-rah
SVSvenska
fagara
fa-gah-rah
SWKiswahili
fagara
fa-gah-rah
TRTürkçe
fagara
fa-gah-rah
UKУкраїнська
фагара
fa-gah-rah
VITiếng Việt
fagara
fa-gah-rah
ZUZU
ifagara
i-fa-gah-rah