Momo

Etymology
མོག་མོག་:, from Chinese 馍馍 (reference: Jīn Péng 金鹏 (ed.): Zàngyǔ jiǎnzhì 藏语简志. Mínzú chūbǎnshè 民族出版社, Beijing 1983, p. 31.)

Noun

 * 1) A type of Tibetan, Ladakhi and Nepali dumpling made with a simple flour and water dough.

Translations

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: ,
 * Dutch:
 * Dzongkha:
 * Finnish: momo, momo-nyytti
 * French:
 * Japanese: モモ
 * Japanese: モモ
 * Japanese: モモ
 * Japanese: モモ


 * Polish:
 * Russian: момо
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Tibetan:
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian: момо
 * Turkish:
 * Ukrainian: момо

Noun

 * 1)  a thigh
 * 2)  a peach
 * 3)  a hundred

Derived terms

 * 桃色 (ももいろ, momo iro); pink
 * 桃色鸚哥 (ももいろいんこ, モモイロインコ, momo iro inko); a galah (Eolophus roseicapillus), rose-breasted cockatoo
 * 桃色遊戯 (ももいろゆうぎ, momo iro yuugi); sex play
 * 桃栗三年柿八年 (ももくりさんねんかきはちねん, momo kuri san nen kaki hachi nan); it often takes time to bear the fruit of one's actions, literally, planted peach and chestnut seeds take three years to bear fruit, plums take eight
 * 百声鳥 (ももこえどり, momo koedori); lesser cuckoo (Cuculus poliocephalus)
 * 桃尻 (ももじり, momo jiri); somebody who is bad at horse-riding; a fidgety, restless person
 * 桃園 (ももぞの, momo zono); a peach orchard
 * 百千 (ひゃくせん, hyakusen) or (ももち, momochi); a large number, all sorts, hundreds and thousands
 * 百千鳥 (ももちどり, momochidori); all sorts of birds, hundreds and thousands of birds; a plover; a Japanese bush warbler
 * もも肉, 股肉, 腿肉 (ももにく, momo niku); the meat of the leg, round, ham
 * 桃の花の香り (もものはなのかおり, momo no hana no kaori); fragrance of peach blossom
 * 股引, 股引き, もも引き (ももひき, momo hiki); a close fitting trousers, working trousers
 * 百夜 (ももよ, momo yo); a hundred nights
 * 桃割れ (ももわれ, momo ware); a hairstyle of Meiji and Taisho era, featuring a bun resembling a halved peach

Etymology
From 魔:.

Noun

 * 1) monster, ghost

momo momo