出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/11/16 21:31 UTC 版)
Borrowed from French salep, from Turkish salep, from Arabic سَحْلَب (saḥlab, “type of orchid”). According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the Arabic word is said to be a contraction of خُصَى الثَعْلَب (ḵuṣā aṯ-ṯaʕlab, “fox testicles”) (الثَعْلَب (aṯ-ṯaʕlab, “fox”) + خُصًى (ḵuṣan, “testicles”)), referring to the testicle-like root tubers.
salep (countable and uncountable, plural saleps)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/08/01 13:12 UTC 版)
Salep (Turkish: salep, from Arabic: سحلب saḥlab, Albanian: salep, Azerbaijani: səhləb, Hebrew: סַחְלֶבּּ sakhleb, Greek: σαλέπι salepi, Serbian: салеп/salep, Bosnian: salep (салеп)) refers to the orchid, and sometimes to the drink derived from it, sahlab. It is a flour made from grinding the dried tubers of Orchis mascula, Orchis militaris and related species of orchids, which contain a nutritious starch-like polysaccharide called glucomannan.