Vanilla - Wiktionary

See also: Vanilla

English

[edit]
English Wikipedia has an article on:vanillaWikipedia
Dried vanilla beans

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • vanille (archaic)

Etymology

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Borrowed from Spanish vainilla, a diminutive form of vaina (pod). "Plain" senses derive from the perceived plainness of vanilla ice cream.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /vəˈnɪl.ə/, /vəˈnɛl.ə/
    • Audio (US):(file)
  • (Indic) IPA(key): /vɛˈnɪl(ː)ɑ/
  • Rhymes: -ɪlə, -ɛlə

Noun

[edit]

vanilla (countable and uncountable, plural vanillas)

  1. (countable) Any tropical climbing orchid of the genus Vanilla (especially Vanilla planifolia), bearing podlike fruit yielding an extract used in flavoring food or in perfumes.
    • 1961, Harry E. Wedeck, Dictionary of Aphrodisiacs, New York: The Citadel Press, page 242:Vanilla itself was transplanted from Madagascar, the main source of the spice, to Polynesia a century ago.
  2. (countable) The fruit or bean of the vanilla plant. Synonym: vanilla bean
  3. (uncountable) The extract of the fruit of the vanilla plant. Synonym: vanilla extract
  4. (uncountable) The distinctive fragrant flavour/flavor characteristic of vanilla extract.
  5. (uncountable) Any artificially produced homologue of vanilla extract, principally vanillin produced from lignin from the paper industry or from petrochemicals. Synonym: imitation vanilla
  6. (countable, sexuality, slang) Someone who is not into fetishism.
  7. (uncountable, gaming, slang) An unmodded version of a game. Synonym: stock
  8. A yellowish-white colour, like that of vanilla ice cream. vanilla:  

Derived terms

[edit]
  • banilla
  • Cuban vanilla
  • imitation vanilla
  • nonvanilla
  • plain vanilla
  • vanilla bean
  • vanilla essence
  • vanilla extract
  • vanillafy
  • vanilla grass
  • vanilla leaf
  • vanillaness
  • vanillar
  • vanilla slice
  • vanilla submarine
  • vanilla wafer
  • vanilla-y
  • vanillery

Descendants

[edit]
  • Maori: wanira

Translations

[edit] orchid
  • Azerbaijani: vanil
  • Catalan: vainilla (ca) f
  • Chinese: Mandarin: 香子蘭 / 香子兰 (zh) (xiāngzilán)
  • Classical Nahuatl: tlīlxōchitl
  • Czech: vanilka (cs) f
  • Esperanto: vanilo
  • Finnish: vanilja (fi)
  • French: vanille (fr) f
  • Galician: vainilla (gl) f
  • Georgian: ვანილი (vanili)
  • Greek: βανίλια (el) f (vanília)
  • Hebrew: וניל (he)
  • Hungarian: vanília (hu)
  • Icelandic: vanillujurt f
  • Ido: vanilo (io)
  • Italian: vaniglia (it) f
  • Macedonian: вани́ла f (vaníla)
  • Malagasy: amalo (mg)
  • Nahuatl: tlilxochitl (nah)
  • Norman: vanille f (Jersey)
  • Norwegian: Bokmål: vanilje (no) m
  • Polish: wanilia (pl) f
  • Portuguese: baunilha (pt)
  • Romanian: vanilie (ro) f
  • Russian: вани́ль (ru) f (vanílʹ)
  • Spanish: vainilla (es) f
  • Swedish: vaniljorkidé (sv) c, vanilj (sv) c
  • Tagalog: baynilya
  • Thai: วานิลลา (wá-ní-laa)
  • Turkish: vanilya (tr)
  • Yiddish: וואַנילע f (vanile)
fruit
  • Azerbaijani: vanil
  • Basque: banilla
  • Bulgarian: ванилия (bg) f (vanilija)
  • Catalan: vainilla (ca) f
  • Cebuano: baynilya
  • Chinese: Cantonese: 雲呢拿 / 云呢拿 (wan4 nei1 laa4-2 or wan4 ni1 laa4-2) (colloquial), 香草 (hoeng1 cou2) (formal) Mandarin: 香草 (zh) (xiāngcǎo)
  • Classical Nahuatl: tlīlxōchitl
  • Czech: vanilka (cs) f
  • Danish: vanilje c
  • Esperanto: vanilo
  • Finnish: vaniljatanko (when dried)
  • French: vanille (fr) f
  • Galician: vainilla (gl) f
  • Georgian: ვანილი (vanili)
  • German: Vanille (de) f
  • Greek: βανίλια (el) f (vanília)
  • Hungarian: vanília (hu)
  • Icelandic: vanilla (is) f, vanilja f
  • Ido: vanilo (io)
  • Indonesian: vanila
  • Italian: vaniglia (it) f
  • Japanese: バニラ (ja) (banira)
  • Korean: 바닐라 (ko) (banilla)
  • Kurdish: Northern Kurdish: vanîlya
  • Kyrgyz: ваниль (ky) (vanil)
  • Macedonian: вани́ла f (vaníla)
  • Malagasy: amalo (mg), vanila (mg)
  • Malay: vanila (ms)
  • Norman: vanille f (Jersey)
  • Norwegian: Bokmål: vanilje (no)
  • Portuguese: baunilha (pt) f
  • Quechua: waynilla
  • Romanian: vanilie (ro) f
  • Russian: вани́ль (ru) f (vanílʹ)
  • Serbo-Croatian: Cyrillic: ванила f, ванилија f Roman: vanila (sh) f, vanilija (sh) f
  • Slovene: vanilja f
  • Sorbian: Lower Sorbian: wanilja f
  • Spanish: vainilla (es) f
  • Swedish: vaniljstång (sv) c
  • Tagalog: baynilya
  • Thai: ฝักวานิลลา
  • Tongan: vanila
  • Turkish: vanilya (tr)
  • Urdu: ایک خوشبو f (aik khushbu)
  • Vietnamese: vani, vanilla (vi)
  • Yiddish: וואַנילע f (vanile)
natural extract
  • Armenian: վանիլ (hy) (vanil)
  • Azerbaijani: vanil
  • Bulgarian: ванилия (bg) f (vanilija)
  • Burmese: သစ်ခွရည် (my) (sachkwa.rany)
  • Catalan: vainilla (ca) f
  • Chinese: Cantonese: 雲尼拿香油 / 云尼拿香油 (wan4 nei1 laa4-2 hoeng1 jau4 or wan4 ni1 laa4-2 hoeng1 jau4) Mandarin: 香草精 (zh) (xiāngcǎojīng)
  • Classical Nahuatl: tlīlxōchitl
  • Esperanto: vanilo
  • Faroese: vanilja f
  • Finnish: vaniljauute
  • French: vanille (fr) f
  • Galician: vainilla (gl) f
  • Georgian: ვანილი (vanili)
  • German: Vanille (de) f
  • Greek: βανίλια (el) f (vanília)
  • Hebrew: וניל (he)
  • Icelandic: vanilla (is) f, vanilja f
  • Indonesian: vanila
  • Irish: fanaile m
  • Manx: vanilley f
  • Norman: vanille f (Jersey)
  • Norwegian: Bokmål: vaniljeessens m
  • Polish: wanilia (pl) f
  • Portuguese: baunilha (pt) f
  • Russian: вани́ль (ru) f (vanílʹ)
  • Sorbian: Lower Sorbian: wanilja f
  • Spanish: vainilla (es) f
  • Tagalog: baynilya
  • Turkish: vanilya (tr)
  • Yiddish: וואַנילע f (vanile)
flavor
  • Arabic: ڤَانِيلَّا f (vanillā), ڤَانِيلِيَا f (vaniliyā), وَنِيلِيَّة f (wanīliyya) Egyptian Arabic: ڤانيليا f (vanelia) Hijazi Arabic: فنيليا f (fanīlya, vanīlya)
  • Armenian: վանիլ (hy) (vanil)
  • Azerbaijani: vanil
  • Bulgarian: ванилия (bg) f (vanilija)
  • Catalan: vainilla (ca) f
  • Chinese: Cantonese: 雲呢拿 / 云呢拿 (wan4 nei1 laa4-2 or wan4 ni1 laa4-2) (colloquial), 香草 (hoeng1 cou2) (formal) Mandarin: 香草 (zh) (xiāngcǎo)
  • Czech: vanilka (cs) f
  • Dutch: vanille (nl)
  • Esperanto: vanilo
  • Finnish: vanilja (fi)
  • French: vanille (fr) f
  • Galician: vainilla (gl) f
  • Georgian: ვანილი (vanili)
  • German: Vanille (de) f, Vanille- (de)
  • Greek: βανίλια (el) f (vanília)
  • Hungarian: vanília (hu)
  • Icelandic: vanilla (is) f, vanilja f
  • Indonesian: vanila
  • Italian: vanillina (it) f
  • Japanese: バニラ (ja) (banira)
  • Khmer: វ៉ានីឡា (vaaniilaa)
  • Korean: 바닐라 (ko) (banilla)
  • Macedonian: вани́ла f (vaníla)
  • Manx: vanilley f
  • Maori: wanira
  • Norwegian: Bokmål: vanilje (no) m
  • Polish: wanilia (pl) f
  • Portuguese: baunilha (pt) f
  • Russian: вани́ль (ru) f (vanílʹ)
  • Sorbian: Lower Sorbian: wanilja f
  • Spanish: vainilla (es) f
  • Swahili: lavani, vanila
  • Swedish: vanilj (sv)
  • Tagalog: baynilya
  • Thai: วานิลลา (wá-ní-laa)
  • Turkish: vanilya (tr)
  • Yiddish: וואַנילע f (vanile)
artificial extract
  • Armenian: վանիլ (hy) (vanil)
  • Azerbaijani: vanil
  • Finnish: vanilliini (fi)
  • French: vanille (fr) f
  • Galician: vainilla (gl)
  • Georgian: ვანილი (vanili)
  • Greek: βανίλια (el) f (vanília)
  • Icelandic: vanilla (is) f, vanilja f
  • Ido: vanilo (io)
  • Macedonian: вани́ла f (vaníla)
  • Norman: vanille f (Jersey)
  • Portuguese: baunilha (pt) f
  • Russian: вани́ль (ru) f (vanílʹ)
  • Spanish: vainilla (es) f
  • Tagalog: baynilya
  • Turkish: vanilya (tr)

See also

[edit]
  • flavour extract

Adjective

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vanilla (comparative more vanilla, superlative most vanilla)

  1. (of flavor, etc.) Of vanilla.
    • 2004, David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas, London: Hodder and Stoughton, →ISBN:A mass of folders and binders. One, vanilla in colour, catches her eye.
  2. (colloquial, chiefly computing, retronym) Standard, plain, default, unmodified, basic. vanilla JavaScript
    • 2001, Michael Foot, “BeebIt 0.32 and BBCFiles 0.29 released”, in comp.sys.acorn.announce (Usenet):BBCFiles is a BBC file converter that converts between some of the various types of files used by BBC emulators on Acorn & PC formats. It supports 6502Em style applications & scripts, /ssd dfs disc images (supporting watford double catalogue), vanilla directories, /zip of bbc files with /inf files (with limitations) and directory of bbc files with /inf files.
  3. (sexuality) Not kinky, not involving BDSM. Synonym: normophilic
    • 2006, Felix Lance Falkon, Gay Art: A Historic Collection, →ISBN, page 136:An uncharacteristically vanilla threesome and non-cute realist rendering - derived paradoxically from tracing drawings rather than photographs.
    • 2010, Chloe Stowe, Hard Water, →ISBN, page 37:While Dominick was more of a vanilla kind of a guy himself, he wasn't a total dunce when it came to the kinkier sides of things.
    • 2014, Christina Thacher, The Negotiation: A BDSM Romance, →ISBN:Sebastian could never do that, be in a marriage with a vanilla woman.
  4. Plain; conventional; unimaginative.
    • 2024 August 19, Josh Kaplan, “Why are Jews expected to put up with rampant social media antisemitism?”, in The Jewish Chronicle‎[1], London: Jewish Chronicle Media Limited, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 22 October 2025:The further right or left you go, the more likely you are to eventually come around to hating Jews. On the left, this is plain to see. From the Corbyn-era trend to attack Israel for all the world's sins, to the self-hating asaJews that tweeted enthusiastically about October 7 being a 'day of celebration' to previously vanilla comedian Reginald Hunter retweeting posts about the evils of the Talmud.

Synonyms

[edit]
  • vanillar
  • See also Thesaurus:bare-bones
[edit]
  • vanillin

Translations

[edit] of vanilla
  • Bulgarian: ванилов (vanilov)
  • Dutch: vanille-
  • Finnish: vanilja- (fi), vaniljainen
  • French: de vanille, à la vanille
  • Ido: vanilala
  • Italian: di vaniglia, alla vaniglia, vanigliato
  • Russian: вани́льный (ru) (vanílʹnyj)
  • Spanish: vainillado
  • Swedish: vanilj-
standard
  • Finnish: tavallinen (fi), vanilja- (fi) (colloquial)
  • French: standard (fr), classique (fr)
  • Greek: κανονικός (el) (kanonikós), απλός (el) (aplós), βασικός (el) (vasikós)
  • Russian: обы́чный (ru) m (obýčnyj)
not kinky, not involving BDSM
  • Navajo: doo ádíláahgo naanéego, doo ádíláahgo jikʼeedgo (vulgar)
plain; unimaginative

See also

[edit]
  • (slang, electronics): jellybean

Icelandic

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Borrowed from English vanilla, from Spanish vainilla, diminutive of vaina (pod), from Latin vāgīna (sheath).

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ˈvaːnɪlːa/

Noun

[edit]

vanilla f (genitive singular vanillu, no plural) or less commonlyvanilla n (genitive singular vanilla, no plural)

  1. (usually singular only, uncountable) vanilla

Declension

[edit] Declension of vanilla (sg-only feminine)
singular
indefinite definite
nominative vanilla vanillan
accusative vanillu vanilluna
dative vanillu vanillunni
genitive vanillu vanillunnar

or less commonly

Declension of vanilla (sg-only neuter)
singular
indefinite definite
nominative vanilla vanillað
accusative vanilla vanillað
dative vanilla vanillanu
genitive vanilla vanillans

Derived terms

[edit]
  • vanilluplanta

Tag » How Do You Spell Vanilla