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rice (n.)

mid-13c., from Old French ris, from Italian riso, from Latin oriza, from Greek oryza "rice," via an Indo-Iranian language (compare Pashto vriže, Old Persian brizi), ultimately from Sanskrit vrihi-s "rice." The Greek word is the ultimate source of all European words (Welsh reis, German reis, Lithuanian ryžiai, Serbo-Croatian riza, Polish ryż, etc.). Introduced 1647 in the Carolinas. Rice paper (1822), originally used in China, Japan, etc., is made from straw of rice.

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Definitions of rice from WordNet
1
rice (n.)
grains used as food either unpolished or more often polished;
rice (n.)
annual or perennial rhizomatous marsh grasses; seed used for food; straw used for paper;
2
rice (v.)
sieve so that it becomes the consistency of rice;
rice the potatoes
3
Rice (n.)
English lyricist who frequently worked with Andrew Lloyd Webber (born in 1944);
Synonyms: Sir Tim Rice / Timothy Miles Bindon Rice
Rice (n.)
United States playwright (1892-1967);
Synonyms: Elmer Rice / Elmer Leopold Rice / Elmer Reizenstein
From wordnet.princeton.edu