mushroom

/ˈmʌʃˌɹəm/

UK: /ˈmʌʃˌɹəm/

mushroom

English Noun Top 10,166
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.8s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 1.0s
American (Ryan) (medium)
Male 0.5s
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Definition

Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood).

Etymology

From Middle English muscheron, musseron, from Anglo-Norman musherum, moscheron, from Old French moisseron, of obscure origin: probably derived from Old French mosse, moise ("moss"; whence also French mousse), as the use first applied to a type of fungus which grows in moss, from Frankish *mosu (“moss”) or Old Dutch *mosa (“moss”), akin to Old High German mosa (“moor, swamp”), Old High German mos (“moss, bog”), Old High German mios (“moss, mire”), Old English mēos (“moss”), Old English mōs (“bog, marsh”), Old Norse mosi (“moss”), Old Norse myrr (“bog, mire”), from Proto-Germanic *musą, *musô, *miuziz (“mosses, bog”), from Proto-Indo-European *mews- (“mosses, mold, mildew”). Displaced native Old English swamm. More at mire. Alternatively, the Old French may be of pre-Roman origin. See Ancient Greek μύκης (múkēs, “mushroom”). Doublet of moss and mousse.

Example Sentences

  • "Some mushrooms are edible and taste good, while others are poisonous and taste foul."
  • "Arabs consider the eating of mushrooms as an aphrodisiac aid."
  • "upstarts […]call in reproach mushrooms"
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