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Cabbage   /kˈæbədʒ/  /kˈæbɪdʒ/   Listen
noun
Cabbage  n.  (Bot.)
1.
An esculent vegetable of many varieties, derived from the wild Brassica oleracea of Europe. The common cabbage has a compact head of leaves. The cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, etc., are sometimes classed as cabbages.
2.
The terminal bud of certain palm trees, used, like, cabbage, for food. See Cabbage tree, below.
3.
The cabbage palmetto. See below.
Cabbage aphis (Zoöl.), a green plant-louse (Aphis brassicae) which lives upon the leaves of the cabbage.
Cabbage beetle (Zoöl.), a small, striped flea-beetle (Phyllotreta vittata) which lives, in the larval state, on the roots, and when adult, on the leaves, of cabbage and other cruciferous plants.
Cabbage fly (Zoöl.), a small two-winged fly (Anthomyia brassicae), which feeds, in the larval or maggot state, on the roots of the cabbage, often doing much damage to the crop.
Cabbage head, the compact head formed by the leaves of a cabbage; contemptuously or humorously, and colloquially, a very stupid and silly person; a numskull.
Cabbage palmetto, a species of palm tree (Sabal Palmetto) found along the coast from North Carolina to Florida.
Cabbage rose (Bot.), a species of rose (Rosa centifolia) having large and heavy blossoms.
Cabbage tree, Cabbage palm, a name given to palms having a terminal bud called a cabbage, as the Sabal Palmetto of the United States, and the Euterpe oleracea and Oreodoxa oleracea of the West Indies.
Sea cabbage.(Bot.)
(a)
Sea kale
(b)
The original Plant (Brassica oleracea), from which the cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, etc., have been derived by cultivation.
Thousand-headed cabbage. See Brussels sprouts.



Cabbage  n.  Cloth or clippings cabbaged or purloined by one who cuts out garments.



verb
Cabbage  v. i.  To form a head like that the cabbage; as, to make lettuce cabbage.



Cabbage  v. i.  (past & past part. cabbaged; pres. part. cabbaging)  To purloin or embezzle, as the pieces of cloth remaining after cutting out a garment; to pilfer. "Your tailor... cabbages whole yards of cloth."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Cabbage" Quotes from Famous Books



... of all their piety and preachings. I knew well what this extravagant holiness would make of my dear cousin and old Ulrich. If people would persist in being so wonderfully religious, they would soon become as sour as an old cabbage head; and Sidonia declared, that, for her part, a hundred horses should not drag her back to Wolgast, where she had been lectured and insulted, and all because she would not learn her catechism ...
— Sidonia The Sorceress V1 • William Mienhold

... FAT-SOLUBLE A are milk, eggs, and leafy vegetables. Leafy vegetables include: spinach, lettuce, celery tops, beet tops, Swiss chard, collards, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, and onions. Milk products, such as butter and cheese, and cod-liver oil also contain fat-soluble A. It is also thought to be present in certain vegetables such as carrots, which are not leafy vegetables. Not all fat foods contain fat- soluble ...
— School and Home Cooking • Carlotta C. Greer

... the promenade Looking very savage; Steward and the cabin maid Fightin' 'bout the cabbage; All about the cabin floor Passengers lie sea-sick; Steamer bound to go ashore,— Rip, ...
— Cowboy Songs - and Other Frontier Ballads • Various

... could be seen that the space between the base of the hills and the ocean was occupied by a plain which sloped very gradually to the beach. Here and there across its surface were huge mounds of earth and rock and, occasionally, a small lakelet fringed with a dense growth of tussock and Maori cabbage. ...
— The Home of the Blizzard • Douglas Mawson

... at noon, "in Russian style," as Mayakin said. At first a big bowl of fat, sour cabbage soup was served with rye biscuits in, but without meat, then the same soup was eaten with meat cut into small pieces; then they ate roast meat—pork, goose, veal or rennet, with gruel—then again a bowl of soup with vermicelli, and all this was usually followed by dessert. They ...
— Foma Gordyeff - (The Man Who Was Afraid) • Maxim Gorky


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