Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word
hemlock . In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
hemlock , but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
hemlock in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
hemlock you have here. The definition of the word
hemlock will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
hemlock , as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Conium maculatum , one of the umbellifers called hemlock
Tsuga heterophylla , one of the conifers called hemlock
Etymology
From Middle English hemlok , hemeluc , from Old English hemlīc , hymlīc m and hymlīce f ( “ hemlock, bryony , convolvulus ” ) , of uncertain origin.
speculative etymology
Compare Old English hymele ( “ hop-vine, hops ” ) , Old English humele ( “ bryony, widerton, hair moss, gold-hair, morning glory ” ) , Danish and Swedish humle ( “ hops ” ) , Icelandic humall ( “ hops ” ) . Perhaps from Scythian , from Proto-Iranian *háwHmah ( “ ephedra ; juice” ) , from Proto-Indo-Iranian *sáwHmas from Proto-Indo-European *sewh₁- ( “ to press out, extract ” ) .
cognates
More at suck .
Pronunciation
Noun
hemlock (countable and uncountable , plural hemlocks )
Any of the poisonous umbelliferous plants , of the genera
Conium , either Conium maculatum or Conium chaerophylloides .
1940 , Rosetta E. Clarkson, Green Enchantments: The Magic Spell of Gardens , The Macmillan Company, page 273 :Have a tree or two the witches particularly like, such as the alder, larch, cypress and hemlock ; then, to counteract any possible evil effects, there must be a holly, yew, hazel, elder, mountain ash or juniper.
1971 , Richard Carpenter , Catweazle and the Magic Zodiac , Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, page 41 :There were bunches of wild garlic to keep out evil spirits, foxgloves for healing spells and hemlock and vervain for darker magic.
Cicuta , water hemlock plant.
The poison obtained from these Conium and Cicuta plants.
Any of several coniferous trees , of the genus Tsuga , that grow in North America ; the wood of such trees.
2018 , Richard Powers , The Overstory , Vintage (2019), page 380 :The wind blows and the hemlocks wave their feathery leading shoots. Such a graceful profile, so elegant a tree.
Synonyms
( Conium ) : , devil's bread , devil's porridge , herb bennet , poison hemlock , poison parsley , Conium maculatum , Conium chaerophylloides
( Cicuta ) : beaver poison , cowbane , musquash root , poison parsnip , spotted corobane , water hemlock
Derived terms
Translations
poisonous plant of genus Conium
Albanian: kukutë f , magunë
Amharic: please add this translation if you can
Arabic: شَوْكَرَان m ( šawkarān )
Armenian:
Modern Armenian: please add this translation if you can
Old Armenian: խինդ ( xind )
Aromanian: cucutã f
Bashkir: please add this translation if you can
Basque: please add this translation if you can
Belarusian: балігало́ў m ( balihalóŭ ) , о́мег m ( ómjeh ) , аме́жнік m ( amjéžnik )
Bulgarian: бучини́ш (bg) m ( bučiníš ) , мангу́на ( mangúna )
Catalan: cicuta (ca) f
Chinese:
Mandarin: 毒芹 (zh) ( dúqín ) (Cicuta virosa), 毒参 ( dúcān ) (Conium maculatum)
Cornish: kegis ( collective ) , kegisen ( singulative )
Czech: bolehlav (cs) m
Danish: skarntyde c
Dutch: scheerling (nl)
Finnish: katko (fi) , myrkkykatko (fi)
French: ciguë (fr) f
Galician: canafrecha f
Georgian: please add this translation if you can
German: Schierling (de) m , ( Conium maculatum ) Gefleckter Schierling m / Fleckenschierling m
Greek: κώνειο (el) n ( kóneio ) , κιρκούτα f ( kirkoúta )
Ancient: κώνειον n ( kṓneion )
Byzantine: μαγγοῦνα f ( mangoûna ) , μαγκοῦνα f ( mankoûna ) , μαγγοῦτα ( mangoûta ) , μαγκοῦτα ( mankoûta )
Hebrew: רֹאשׁ (he) m ( rōš )
Hindi: please add this translation if you can
Hungarian: bürök (hu)
Irish: please add this translation if you can
Italian: cicuta (it) f
Japanese: 毒人参 ( dokuninjin )
Kazakh: убалдырған ( ubaldyrğan )
Korean: 독당근 ( dokdanggeun )
Kyrgyz: please add this translation if you can
Latin: cicūta f
Lithuanian: mauda f
Macedonian: бу́чумиш m ( búčumiš )
Persian: شوکران (fa) ( šawkarân )
Polish: szczwół m
Portuguese: cicuta (pt) f
Romanian: cucută (ro)
Russian: болиголо́в (ru) m ( boligolóv ) , оме́г (ru) m ( omég )
Scottish Gaelic: i-teodha f , a-theodha f , de-theodha f
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ку̀кута f
Latin: kùkuta (sh) f
Slovene: míšjak m
Spanish: cicuta f
Tigrinya: please add this translation if you can
Turkish:
Modern Turkish: baldıran (tr)
Ottoman Turkish: بالدران ( baldıran )
Turkmen: please add this translation if you can
Ukrainian: болиголо́в (uk) m ( bolyholóv ) , оме́г m ( oméh ) , оме́жник m ( oméžnyk )
Uzbek: please add this translation if you can
Volapük: ( Conium ) konid , ( Conium maculatum ) stenöfakonid , konidavenen ( poison )
Welsh: cegid f pl
poisonous plant of genus
Cicuta — see cowbane