The name pumpkin originated from the Greek word for "large melon" which is "pepon."
the word pumpkin was originated from the Greek language.
the language of latanian The word pumpkin comes from the Greek word pepon, meaning large melon.
the largest pumpkin grown weighed 1,140 lbs pumpkins are a fruit the word pumpkin is greek for large melon pumpkins are 90% water the first pumpkins were grown in Mexico :) hope this helps !!!
the large land of orange things and Mexico
Κολοκύθα (kolokitha) (the plant).
pumpkin is called kadufalam in sanskrit
Little pumpkin My little pumpkin Sweet little pumpkin I love pumpkins and I've always thought the word pumpkin used to describe babies is adorable!
Yes, you can have an alliteration with the word "pumpkin." An example could be: "Perfectly plump pumpkins."
A pumpkin is "une citrouille" (fem.) in French.
a pumpkin is 'une citrouille' in French.
Pumpkin-head is an American English colloquialism meaning "person with hair cut short all around" and is attested/recorded from 1781. Now THAT'S a name!Pumpkin can also be a nickname for your sweetheart, as in "You are so SWEET, Pumpkin".However it is also used in reference to someone who is NOT a night-owl, as in "Would you like to share a cab home, or are you going to turn into a pumpkin at midnight, again?".The word itself, pumpkin, is an English word coined in the 1640s as an alteration of pumpion, which was, itself derived in the 1540s from the Middle French word pompon, which derived from the Latin word peponem, which derived from the Greek word pepon, meaning "melon" which evolved from peptein, meaning "to cook".The term Pumpkin-pie is attested from the 1650s.Antarctica is the only continent where pumpkins cannot be grown!
it's the great pumpkin charlie brown by schultz