vine

[vahyn] /vaɪn/
noun
1.
any plant having a long, slender stem that trails or creeps on the ground or climbs by winding itself about a support or holding fast with tendrils or claspers.
2.
the stem of any such plant.
3.
a grape plant.
Origin
1250-1300; Middle English < Old French vi(g)ne < Latin vīnea vine(yard), equivalent to vīn(um) wine + -ea, feminine of -eus -eous
Related forms
vineless, adjective
vinelike, adjective
Examples from the web for vine
  • Dodder, native to tropical and temperate climates around the world, is a parasitic vine that wraps around a host plant.
  • With close neighbors, you could plant a blooming vine on it for a living fence.
  • Kudzu is a climbing vine that rapidly overtakes other plants.
  • The monkeys also rub their fur with clematis-vine stems and piper-plant leaves.
  • Suggested use: ground or fence cover, climbing vine.
  • If you wait too long the fruit will fall off the vine and shrivel.
  • As a result, leaves at the ground level of a vine growing in the forest are a deeper green than leaves high up on the vine.
  • It has allowed the fruit to come off the vine richer and riper.
  • Kids can watch the monkey spin down the vine and can launch the monkey from the elephant's spring-loaded trunk.
  • Cultivars, or varieties bred from the vine, account for nearly all of the wine produced today.
British Dictionary definitions for vine

vine

/vaɪn/
noun
1.
any of various plants, esp the grapevine, having long flexible stems that creep along the ground or climb by clinging to a support by means of tendrils, leafstalks, etc
2.
the stem of such a plant
Derived Forms
vined, adjective
vineless, adjective
vinelike, adjective
viny, adjective
Word Origin
C13: from Old French vine, from Latin vīnea vineyard, from vīneus belonging to wine, from vīnum wine

Vine

/vaɪn/
noun
1.
Barbara. See (Ruth) Rendell
Word Origin and History for vine
n.

c.1300, from Old French vigne, from Latin vinea "vine, vineyard," from vinum "wine," from PIE *win-o-, from an Italic noun related to words for "wine" in Greek, Armenian, Hittite, and non-Indo-European Georgian and West Semitic (cf. Hebrew yayin, Ethiopian wayn); probably ultimately from a lost Mediterranean language word *w(o)in- "wine." The European grape vine was imported to California via Mexico by priests in 1564.

vine in the Bible

one of the most important products of Palestine. The first mention of it is in the history of Noah (Gen. 9:20). It is afterwards frequently noticed both in the Old and New Testaments, and in the ruins of terraced vineyards there are evidences that it was extensively cultivated by the Jews. It was cultivated in Palestine before the Israelites took possession of it. The men sent out by Moses brought with them from the Valley of Eshcol a cluster of grapes so large that "they bare it between two upon a staff" (Num. 13: 23). The vineyards of En-gedi (Cant. 1:14), Heshbon, Sibmah, Jazer, Elealeh (Isa. 16:8-10; Jer. 48:32, 34), and Helbon (Ezek. 27:18), as well as of Eshcol, were celebrated. The Church is compared to a vine (Ps. 80:8), and Christ says of himself, "I am the vine" (John 15:1). In one of his parables also (Matt. 21:33) our Lord compares his Church to a vineyard which "a certain householder planted, and hedged round about," etc. Hos. 10:1 is rendered in the Revised Version, "Israel is a luxuriant vine, which putteth forth his fruit," instead of "Israel is an empty vine, he bringeth forth fruit unto himself," of the Authorized Version.

Idioms and Phrases with vine