Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
KieliKäännökset
espanjarábano blanco
esperantodajkono
hollantiDaikon, witte rammenas, winter-radijs, Japanse radijs, Chinese radijs
italiadaikon, ravanello cinese, ravanello giapponese, ravanello invernale
japani大根 (daikon / ダイコン, だいこん, daikon)
puolarzodkiew japońska, daikon
ranskaradis noir, daïkon, radis blanc, radis d'hiver, radis chinois, radis japonais, daïko
ruotsiträdgårdsrättika
saksaDaikon, chinesischer Rettich, Daikon-Rettich, Japanischer Rettich, Winterrettich, Mooli
suomivalkoretikka, retikka
tanskaKinaradisen, Japan-Ræddike
turkkidaikon, Beyaz Turp, Japon turpu, Oryantal turp, Çin turp
tšekkiředkev setá bílá, daikon
unkaridaikon, japán retek, kínai retek, jégcsapretek
venäjäяпонская редька (japonskaja redka), китайская редька (kitaiskaja redka), дайко́н (daikón)

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. An East Asian cultivar or subspecies of garden radish (Raphanus raphanistrum subsp. sativus, syn. Raphanus sativus) bearing a large, white, carrot-shaped taproot consumed throughout East and South Asia but grown in North America primarily as a fallow crop for its fast-growing leaves (used as animal fodder) and as a soil ripper.
  2. (Japanese cuisine) The usual Japanese cultivar, Japanese radish.
  3. Closely-related cultivars such as the enormous turnip-shaped Sakurajima or green-and-red watermelon radish.

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkodaikon
Monikkodaikons

An East Asian cultivar or subspecies of garden radish (Raphanus raphanistrum subsp. sativus, syn. Raphanus sativus) bearing a large, white, carrot-shaped taproot consumed throughout East and South Asia but grown in North America primarily as a fallow crop for its fast-growing leaves (used as animal fodder) and as a soil ripper.

From left to right: watermelon radish, daikon, bái luóbo, waemu, yeolmu, and ponytail radish

(Japanese cuisine) The usual Japanese cultivar, Japanese radish.

Daikon sold in Nara, Japan

Closely-related cultivars such as the enormous turnip-shaped Sakurajima or green-and-red watermelon radish.

Varieties of Raphanus raphanistrum subsp. sativus from the Seikei Zusetsu agricultural encyclopedia, 1804