The name "tomato" is directly from the Aztec xitomatl and the Nahua tomatl as said to the Spanish explorers who found the tomato in Central and South America.
The present day Spanish for tomato is 'tomate' (tawMAHtay)
The word for tomato in Spanish is tomate. It is pronounced toh-MAH-teh.
tomato?
spanish
Tamotina Festival
I think you mean 'el tOmate' = (the) tomato
The word 'tomato' comes from the Nuahtl term for the fruit. It was adopted by the Spanish as 'tomate' in the 1600s, and came into English in its present form in the mid 1700s.
It derives from the word "tomatl", in the Nahuatl language of central Mexico, where tomatoes originate from. It was then changed to tomate in Spanish and finally changed one last time to tomato in English. -------------------- 'xitomatl' is believed to be the Aztec name given to the tomato when tribes in Central America began its systematic cultivation. The modern tomato is probably derived from wild plants from South America, and there are still several varieties of wild tomatoes found in the Andes Mountains in Peru.
The word "tomato" originated from the Nahuatl language spoken by the Aztecs in Mexico.
The italian word for tomato is Pomodoro
tomate
Tomatoes are indigenous to the new world. Today many of them are grown in Mexico. They are also found in Southern and Central America.
Tomato is the correct spelling.