honey

  • 11Honey — Honey,der:⇨Liebling(1) …

    Das Wörterbuch der Synonyme

  • 12Honey — For other uses, see Honey (disambiguation). Jars of honey and honeycomb …

    Wikipedia

  • 13honey — honeyful, adj. honeyless, adj. honeylike, adj. /hun ee/, n., pl. honeys, adj., v., honeyed or honied, honeying. n. 1. a sweet, viscid fluid produced by bees from the nectar collected from flowers, and stored in nests or hives as food. 2. this… …

    Universalium

  • 14Honey —    1) Heb. ya ar, occurs only 1 Sam. 14:25, 27, 29; Cant. 5:1, where it denotes the honey of bees. Properly the word signifies a forest or copse, and refers to honey found in woods.    2) Nopheth, honey that drops (Ps. 19:10; Prov. 5:3; Cant.… …

    Easton's Bible Dictionary

  • 15honey — n. (pl. eys) 1 a sweet sticky yellowish fluid made by bees and other insects from nectar collected from flowers. 2 the colour of this. 3 a sweetness. b a sweet thing. 4 a person or thing excellent of its kind. 5 esp. US (usu. as a form of… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 16honey —    Used as a term of endearment since the fourteenth century, either alone or as a vocative element. In Shakespeare it is mainly used as the latter, in expressions like ‘honey nurse’, ‘sweet honey Greek’, ‘my good sweet honey lord’, but Othello… …

    A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

  • 17Honey — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sur les autres projets Wikimedia : « Honey », sur le Wiktionnaire (dictionnaire universel) Honey peut désigner : Toponymes Le lac… …

    Wikipédia en Français

  • 18honey — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ clear ▪ runny ▪ wild … OF HONEY ▪ jar, pot VERB + HONEY …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 19honey — {{11}}honey (n.) O.E. hunig, from P.Gmc. *hunagam (Cf. O.N. hunang, Swed. honung, O.S. huneg, O.Fris. hunig, M.Du. honich, Du. honig, O.H.G. honang, Ger. Honig honey ); perhaps from PIE *k(e)neko yellow, golden (Cf. Skt …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 20honey — I. noun (plural honeys) Etymology: Middle English hony, from Old English hunig; akin to Old High German honag honey, and probably to Sanskrit kāñcana gold, Latin canicae bran Date: before 12th century 1. a. a sweet viscid material elaborated out… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary