l, vej-i-tuh-]
| 1. | any plant whose fruit, seeds, roots, tubers, bulbs, stems, leaves, or flower parts are used as food, as the tomato, bean, beet, potato, onion, asparagus, spinach, or cauliflower. |
| 2. | the edible part of such a plant, as the tuber of the potato. |
| 3. | any member of the vegetable kingdom; plant. |
| 4. | Informal. a person who is so severely impaired mentally or physically as to be largely incapable of conscious responses or activity. |
| 5. | a dull, spiritless, and uninteresting person. |
| 6. | of, consisting of, or made from edible vegetables: a vegetable diet. |
| 7. | of, pertaining to, or characteristic of plants: the vegetable kingdom. |
| 8. | derived from plants: vegetable fiber; vegetable oils. |
| 9. | consisting of, comprising, or containing the substance or remains of plants: vegetable matter; a vegetable organism. |
| 10. | of the nature of or resembling a plant: the vegetable forms of Art Nouveau ornament. |
| 11. | inactive; inert; dull; uneventful: a vegetable existence. |
vegetable
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vegetable veg·e·ta·ble (věj'tə-bəl, věj'ĭ-tə-)
n.
A plant cultivated for an edible part, such as the root of the beet, the leaf of spinach, or the flower buds of broccoli or cauliflower.
The edible part of such a plant.