ONION
Source: 551, 556, 560, 566, 567
One of the vegetables of Egypt for which the Hebrews murmured in the desert, Nu 11:5. Hasselquist says that the onions of Egypt are remarkably sweet, mild, and nutritious. Juvenal, Pliny, and Lucian satirize the superstitious regard of the Egyptians for this bulb.
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Onion. Onion
The Israelites in the wilderness longed for the “onions and garlick of Egypt” (Num. 11:5). This was the betsel of the Hebrews, the Allium cepe of botanists, of which it is said that there are some thirty or forty species now growing in Palestine. The onion is “the ‘undivided’ leek, unio_, _unus, one.”
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ONION. → General scriptures concerning Nu 11:5
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onion. Onion, n. a plant having a bulbous root
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On″ion (?), n. [[F. ognon, fr. L. unio oneness, unity, a single large pearl, an onion. See One, Union.]] (Bot.) A liliaceous plant of the genus Allium (A. cepa), having a strong-flavored bulb and long hollow leaves; also, its bulbous root, much used as an article of food. The name is often extended to other species of the genus. Onion fish (Zoöl.), the grenadier. — Onion fly (Zoöl.) a dipterous insect whose larva feeds upon the onion; especially, Anthomyia ceparum and Ortalis flexa. — Welsh onion. (Bot.) See Cibol. — Wild onion (Bot.), a name given to several species of the genus Allium.