vintage and contemporary postcards and stamps from around the world


19 February 2023

eggplant

 

Some of you may know this as an aubergine, but I know it as an eggplant (though, more and more, I find myself using aubergine)




an 'E' for Sunday Stamps

12 comments:

Mail Adventures said...

In Catalan we say albergínia. But I love the name eggplant best!

My E-stamps are on this post.

Mail Adventures said...

Sorry, the link.

fafa said...

Moi j'aime le mot aubergine qui est devenu une couleur ,il y a quelques années en France on appelait les aubergines les contractuelles de police car leurs uniformes étaient de cette couleur, il existe une variété d 'aubergine qui ressemble effectivement à un œuf mais je ne suis pas certaine qu'elles soient de cette couleur(aubergine apple green) /°

Joy said...

Usually an aubergine to me, recipes seem to use both terms.
My E is here

violet s said...

J'ai compris que le nom "aubergine" vient de la variété blanche en forme d'oeuf. Je ne l’ai pas vu ici.
Et bienvenue

violet s said...

We have enough British cooking shows that aubergine and courgette are as familiar as eggplant and zucchini. Can't get used to your pronunciation of 'oregano' though!

viridian said...

My contribution is here:
http://viridianpostcard.blogspot.com/2023/02/sunday-stamps-letter-e.html

violet s said...

interestingly, I thought it was originally Spanish from Arabic. but the Spanish is completely different and is closer to what they call it in India.

FinnBadger said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
FinnBadger said...

A striking stamp, I love the brilliant colors the designer used.

Link to my E stamp

Mail Adventures said...

Berenjena in Spanish, albergínia in Catalan, aubergine in English and French... come from the same Arabic root (باذنجان), taken from Persian

Joy said...

LOL, vice versa