The fig's unique botanical characteristic of having hidden flowers rather than visible blossoms has led to similar etymological descriptions across Chinese (wuhua guo, meaning 'no flower fruit'), Persian (anjir, from an Iranian root meaning 'enclosed growth'), and Arabic (tin), demonstrating how different languages independently encode the same natural observation through different linguistic strategies.
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Why Chinese, Persian, and Arabic All Call It the Same Thing #linguistics #etymologyAñadido:
This right here is a fig.
In Chinese, we call this wuhua guo, which literally means no flower fruit.
What's fascinating is that this idea also shows up in other languages as well. In Persian, fig is anjir, which is from an older Iranian root connected to enclosed growth, reflecting how with a fig, its flowers are hidden rather than visible. So, across Chinese, Persian, and even Arabic, where fig is tin, but in classical descriptions, it's often contrasted with fruits that visibly blossom, you see different linguistic strategies. You see in Chinese descriptive compounds where we refer to this as a no flowering fruit or inherited roots, such as Persian from Iranian and semantic contrast, which you see in Arabic, all pointing to the same observation. The fig, just looks like a fruit that skipped a stage.
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