The word "apple" originates from the Old English term "æppel," which has its roots in the Proto-Germanic word "*ap(a)laz." This term is also related to similar words in other Germanic languages, such as "Apfel" in German and "appel" in Dutch. The word has been used historically to refer not only to the specific fruit we know today but also more generally to fruits in various contexts. Over time, its meaning became more specialized to refer to the specific pomaceous fruit we commonly consume.
Apple is from the Old English "æppel" and was used to describe any type of fruit and not just what we know as the apple today.
It comes from the Greek word lógos.
It came from the Latin word mentula...
From Aztlán (White Land), an allusion to their origins, probably in Northern Mexico.
The word dungarees come from the Hindi (Indian) word dungri
i am not shoor it is from old english.
Apple don't come downloaded with any apps, you have to download them.
Apple is from the Old English "æppel" and was used to describe any type of fruit and not just what we know as the apple today.
yes indeed apple wood does come from apple trees
apple - mansanas
Apple can be translated as "pomme".
No an, a and the belong to a small groups of words called articles.articles come before nouns -- the dog, an apple, a pigor articles come before adjective + noun -- the big dog, a juicy apple, a fat pig.
The African Luhya word for the English word "apple" is "matundaa".
The word 'apple' is a noun.
Yes, apple is a noun, a thing; apple is a singular, common, concrete noun. The word apple is also an adjective, a word that describes a noun, for example apple pie or apple juice.
Yes, the word 'apple' is a noun, a word for a type of fruit, a word for a thing.
The Tamil word for Apple is araththi pazham.அர‌த்திப்ப‌ழ‌ம்