/ˈbloʊm/
OriginFrom 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.
- feminineflower; 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.
- feminineefflorescence
- feminineflower
“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.
- femininetail, scut (of a hare)
- femininenose, bouquet (of a wine)
FormsBlomen(plural) · Blööm(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0