milk
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milk
Summary
milk is a class of anatomical entity[1]. milk ranks in the top 0.8% of class_of_anatomical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,950 views/month, #11 of 1,372).[2]
Key Facts
- milk's instance of is recorded as class of anatomical entity[3].
- milk is a type of food[4].
- milk is a type of food ingredient[5].
- milk is a type of body fluid[6].
- milk is a type of emulsion[7].
- milk is a type of secretion[8].
- milk is a type of particular anatomical entity[9].
- milk is a type of dairy-milk beverage[10].
- milk is a type of non-alcoholic beverage[11].
- milk is part of yogurt[12].
- milk is part of quark[13].
- milk is used for dairy-milk beverage[14].
- milk is used for dairy product[15].
- milk is used for food[16].
- milk is used for cheese[17].
- milk is used for yogurt[18].
- milk is used for ricotta[19].
- milk is used for kefir[20].
- milk is used for whey[21].
- milk's Commons category is recorded as Milk[22].
- milk's color is recorded as white[23].
- milk's color is recorded as yellow[24].
- milk's Unicode character is recorded as 🥛[25].
- milk comprises liquid water[26].
- milk comprises protein[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Things named for milk include Milky Way[28], a barred spiral galaxy[29]; Milka[30], a trademark[31], founded in 1943[32], headquartered in Lörrach[33]; pilk[34], an internet meme[35], founded in 2020[36]; Chi-Chi[37], a fictional human[38]; bar mleczny[39], in Poland[40]; and Milk River[41], a river[42], in United States[43].
Why It Matters
milk ranks in the top 0.8% of class_of_anatomical_entity entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (5,950 views/month, #11 of 1,372).[2] milk has Wikipedia articles in 30 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[44] milk is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[45]
Entities named for milk include Milky Way[28], a barred spiral galaxy[29]; Milka[30], a trademark[31], founded in 1943[32], headquartered in Lörrach[33]; pilk[34], an internet meme[35], founded in 2020[36]; Chi-Chi[37], a fictional human[38]; bar mleczny[39], in Poland[40]; and Milk River[41], a river[42], in United States[43].