Muscatel

Synonyms for "muscatel" (9 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (2)

Strong matches (3)

Related words (4)

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

5 relation types

More general

2 entries

Synonyms

1 entries

Related terms

4 entries

is a

1 entries

related to

6 entries

Translations

22 translations across 9 languages.

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Bulgarian

2 entries
  • мискет noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • мискет noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Catalan

2 entries
  • moscatell noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • moscatell noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Finnish

2 entries
  • muskatelli noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • muskatelliviini noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

German

2 entries
  • Muskateller noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)
  • Muskatellerwein noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Middle English

1 entries
  • muskadel noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Polish

2 entries
  • muszkat noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)
  • muszkatel noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Tagalog

2 entries
  • muskatel noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • muskatel noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Volapük

2 entries
  • muskatäl noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • muskatälavin noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Yiddish

4 entries
  • מוסקאַט noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • מוסקאַט noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)
  • מושקאַט noun (a muscat grape or raisin)
  • מושקאַט noun (a sweet wine from muscat grapes)

Sample sentences

1 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

From a few mud houses beyond a rising ground, not far from the river, came several men and women, bringing peaches and melons in their ponchos, together with baskets of native manufacture, filled with two kinds of grapes, one variety of which was the white Muscatel. At different points near this river my attention had been attracted by a disease very prevalent among the people, which exhibited itself in the form of a large swelling upon the throat, and was called by the natives the coté (goitre).

Source: tatoeba (12176243)

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.