fruit [ fru:t] n.水果;果实;成果
fruit [fru:t] n. 水果;果实
fruit juice n. 果汁
Canned Fruit 罐装水果
Frozen Fruit 冷冻水果
Fruit Basket 水果篮
Fruit Candle 水果类蜡烛
Fruit Tray 水果盘
果 汁
甘蔗汁 Sugar cane juice
酸梅汁 Plum juice
杨桃汁 Star fruit juice
青草茶 Herb juice
fruit plate 水果盘
glace fruit 蜜饯
Earthworm
地龙
East Asian Tree Fern Rhizome
狗脊
Elecampane Inula Root
土木香
Emblic Leafflower Fruit
余甘子
English Walnut Seed
胡桃仁
Entada Sten
瞌藤子
Entadae Stem
过江龙
Ephedra Herb
麻黄
Epigeal Srephaia Root
地不容
Epimedium Herb
淫羊藿
Erect St. John'swort Herb
小连翘
Ergot
麦角
Eriocarpous Glochidion Leaf
漆大姑
Eucommia Bark
杜仲
European Grape Fruit
索索葡萄
European Hop Flower
啤酒花
European Verbena
马鞭草
European Waterhemlock Root
毒芹
False Chinese Swertia Herb
当药
Falsehellebore Root and Rhizome
藜芦
Falsesour Cherry
樱桃核
Fangchi Root
广防已
Feather Cockscomb Seed
青葙子
Fennel Fruit
小茴香
Fermented Soybean
淡豆豉
Fewflower Lysionotus Herb
石吊兰
Field Sowthistle Herb
苣荬菜
Fig
无花果
Figwort Root
玄参
FigwortflowerPicrorhizaRhizome
胡黄连
Filiform Cassytha Herb
无根藤
Fimbriae Orostachys
瓦松
Fineleaf Schizonepeta Herb
荆芥
Finger Citron
佛手
Fistular Onion Stalk
葱白
Fiveleaf Gynostemma Herb
绞股蓝
Flabelate Maiden-hair Herb
过坛龙
Flastem Milkvetch Seed
沙苑子
Flos Caryophyllata
丁香
Fluorite
紫石英
Forbes Wildginger Herb
杜衡
Forest Frog's Oviduct
蛤蟆油
Forrest Silkvine Stem or Root
黑骨头
Fortune Eupatorium Herb
佩兰
Fortune Firethorn Fruit
救兵粮
Fortune Loosestrife Herb
星宿菜
Fortune Meadowrue Herb
白蓬草
Fortune Paulownia Fruit /Royal Paulownia Fruit
泡桐果
Fortune Plumyew Twig and Leaf
三尖杉
Fortune Windmillpalm Petiole
棕榈
Fortune's Drynaria Rhizome
骨碎补
Fourstamen Stephania Root
粉防己/汉防己
Fragrant Eupatorium Herb
飞机草
Fragrant Plantainlily Herb
玉簪
Fragrant Sarcococca Herb
清香桂
Fragrant Solomonseal Rhizome
玉竹
Franchet Groundcherry Calyx and Fruit
锦灯笼
Frangrant Ainsliaea Herb
杏香兔耳风
Frankincense
乳香
Freshwater Sponge
紫梢花
Fringed Iris Herb
铁扁担
Fruticose Breyniae Leaf and Twig
黑面神
A tree is known by its fruit.
君子在德不在衣。
Production of fruit and vegetables has also risen in varying degrees.
水果和蔬菜的产量也不同程度地有了增加。
Good fruit is scarce now and costs a lot.
好水果现在不多,所以价格贵。
Chill the mixed fruit dish until serving time.
吃之前把水果拼盘冷藏起来。
preserved eggs
皮蛋
preserved fruit
果脯
It is the fresh fruit that tempts me at this time of year.
一年的这个时候让我嘴馋的是新鲜水果。
Do you want some fruit?
你要水果吗?
I like all kinds of fruit. 我喜欢各种各样的水果。
An apple is a kind of fruit.
苹果是一种水果。
Several baskets of fruit were eaten at the party.
宴会上,大家吃掉了好几篮水果。
There is a fruit bowl on the table.
桌上有个水果盘。
The fruit dropped down from the tree.
水果从树上掉下来。
We ate some of the fruits and froze the rest.
我们吃了一些水果,把剩下的冷藏起来。
The potato is a vegetable, not a fruit.
马铃薯是一种蔬菜,不是一种水果。
The apple trees are fruiting early this year.
今年苹果树很早结果。
They netted the fruit trees to protect them from birds.
他们用网覆盖住果树以使其免遭鸟害。
The cart is piled high with fruit and vegetables.
马车上堆满了水果和蔬菜。
Action is the proper fruit of knowledge.
行动是知识的巧果。
As the tree, so the fruit.
长什么树,结什么果。
A tree is known by its fruit.
观其行而知其人。
Beauty may have fair leaves, but bitter fruit.
美丽的花或许长好叶,结苦果。
Deeds are fruits; words are but leaves.
行动是果实,言语只是树叶而已。
Every tree is known by its own fruit.
观其言行,知其为人。
Forbidden fruit is sweet.
禁果分外甜。
Fruit ripens not well in the shade.
阴凉处的果子不会成熟。
He that would eat the fruit must climb the tree.
不劳无获。
Like tree, like fruit.
有其因必有其果。
No root, no fruit.
没有根,就没有果。
Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.
忍耐是苦痛的,但它的果实是甜蜜的。
Unprofitable eloquence is like the cypress, which is great and tall, but bears no fruit.
无益雄辩不济事,犹如柏树参天不结果。
When the fruit is scarcest, its taste is sweetest.
物以稀为贵。
Wit without learning is like a tree without fruit.
仅有机智而无真才实学,犹如一棵大树不结果。
Work has a bitter root but sweet fruit.
劳动根虽苦,然而果实甜。
Patience is bitter, but its fruit is sweet.
Jean Jacques Rousseau,French thinker
忍耐是痛苦的,但它的果实是甜蜜的。
法国思想家卢梭.J.J
All the blessings we enjoy are the fruits of labor, toil, and self-denial, and study.
Willian Graham Sumner, American sociologist
我们得到的一切幸福都是劳动、辛苦、自我克制和学习的成果。
美国社会学家萨姆纳.W.G.
Deeds are fruits, words are but leaves.
Joseph Rlema Prake, American poet
行动才是果实,言词不过是树叶。
美国诗人德雷克.J .R.
As fruit needs not only sunshine but cold nights and chilling showers to ripen it , so character needs not only joy but trial and difficulty to mellow it .
Hugh Black, American writer
水果不仅需要阳光,也需要凉夜。寒冷的雨水能使其成熟。人的性格陶冶不仅需要欢乐,也需要考验和困难。
美国作家布莱克H
Have no doubts because of trouble nor be thou discomtited; for the water of life's fountain springeth from a gloom bed.…
Sit not sad because that time a fitful aspect weareth; Patience is most bitter , yet most sweet the fruit it bearth.
Sadi , Perisian poet
你虽然在困苦中也不惴惴不安,
从暗处往往流出生命之泉。……
不要因为时运不济而郁郁寡欢,忍耐虽然最痛苦,
其果实也最香甜。
波斯诗人萨迪
The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet.
Aristtle, Ancient Greek Philosopher
教育的根是苦的,但其果实是甜的。
古希腊哲学家亚里士多德
@@@ 结果
arrive at 1.到达(目的地)
2.达到, 做出(结果、结论等)
as a result of 作为...的结果, 由于...
bear fruit 1.结出果实
2.奏效
come out 1.出版, 刊出
2.结束; 结果是
do the trick 起作用, 管事; 达到理想的结果
end up 1.结束, 停止
2.到达某处或某种状态, 结果,
到头来
result from 因...而产生; 是...的结果
turn out to be & turn out that & as it turns out 结果是, 证明是
wind up 1.以...为结尾, 落得...的结果
2.结束, 完成
Please make the fruit jar airtight.
请把果酱罐密封。
笾 [biān] /basket for fruits/
蒂 [dì] /stem (of fruit)/
脯 [fǔ] /candied fruit/
果 [guǒ] /fruit/result/
果皮 [guǒ pí] /(fruit) peel/
果实 [guǒ shí] /fruit/gains/
果实累累 [guǒ shí lěi lěi] /a selection of thousands of fruits and nuts/
果树 [guǒ shù] /fruit tree/
果汁 [guǒ zhī] /fruit juice/
核 [hé] /nuclear/atomic/stone (of fruit)/
结 [jiē] /knot/sturdy/to bear (fruit)/bond/to tie/to bind/
禁果 [jìn guǒ] /forbidden fruit/
荔枝 [lì zhī] /(n) litchi fruit/
莲雾 [lián wù] /wax apple (a reddish pear-shaped fruit)/
猕猴桃 [mí hóu táo] /Chinese gooseberry/Kiwi fruit/
内皮 [nèi pí] /(med.) endothelium/thin skin on the inside of some fruits (e.g., oranges)/
檎 [qín] /(fruit)/
瓤 [ráng] /pulp of fruit/
葚 [rèn] /fruit of mulberry/
椹 [shèn] /fruit of mulberry/
葚 [shèn] /fruit of mulberry/
水果 [shuǐ guǒ] /fruit/
摘 [zhāi] /to borrow/to pick (flowers, fruit)/to pluck/to take/to select/
What kept them in place?
是什么使它们处于现在的位置呢?
Why didn't they fall out of the sky?
它们为什么不落到天空之外呢?
The fact that the apple fell down toward the earth and not up into the tree answered the question he had been asking himself about those larger fruits of the heavens, the moon and the planets.
苹果向下落到地面不是向上飞到树上,这一事实回答了他长期以来一直对天空中更大果实——月球和行星所存有的疑问。
{adj: acarpous} producing no fruit
{adj: achenial} pertaining to dry one-seeded indehiscent fruit
{adj: acinar} pertaining to the individual parts making up an aggregate fruit like a blackberry
{adj: aged, ripened} of wines, fruit, cheeses; having reached a desired or final condition; (`aged' pronounced as one syllable)
"mature well-aged cheeses"
{adj: aggregate} formed of separate units in a cluster
"raspberries are aggregate fruits"
{adj: angiocarpic, angiocarpous} having or being fruit enclosed in a shell or husk
{adj: autumnal} of or characteristic of or occurring in autumn
"the autumnal equinox"
"autumnal fruits"
<-> wintry, vernal, summery
{adj: barbed, barbellate, briary, briery, bristled, bristly, burred, burry, prickly, setose, setaceous, spiny, thorny} having or covered with protective barbs or quills or spines or thorns or setae etc.
"a horse with a short bristly mane"
"bristly shrubs"
"burred fruits"
"setaceous whiskers"
{adj: bearing} producing or yielding
"an interest-bearing note"
"fruit-bearing trees"
{adj: blasting, ruinous} causing injury or blight; especially affecting with sudden violence or plague or ruin
"the blasting effects of the intense cold on the budding fruit"
"the blasting force of the wind blowing sharp needles of sleet in our faces"
"a ruinous war"
{adj: blue-fruited} bearing blue fruit
{adj: candied, crystalized, crystalised, glace} (used especially of fruits) preserved by coating with or allowing to absorb sugar
{adj: carpophagous, fruit-eating} feeding on fruit
{adj: citrous} of or relating to or producing fruit of the plants of the genus Citrus
"the citrus production of Florida"
{adj: compound} consisting of two or more substances or ingredients or elements or parts
"soap is a compound substance"
"housetop is a compound word"
"a blackberry is a compound fruit"
{adj: conic, conical, conelike, cone-shaped} relating to or resembling a cone
"conical mountains"
"conelike fruit"
{adj: dark-fruited} bearing dark fruit
{adj: dehiscent} (of e.g. fruits and anthers) opening spontaneously at maturity to release seeds
<-> indehiscent
{adj: dried, dehydrated, desiccated} preserved by removing natural moisture
"dried beef"
"dried fruit"
"dehydrated eggs"
"shredded and desiccated coconut meat"
{adj: forbidden, out, prohibited, proscribed, taboo, tabu, verboten} excluded from use or mention
"forbidden fruit"
"in our house dancing and playing cards were out"
"a taboo subject"
{adj: frostbitten} injured by freezing or partial freezing
"frostbitten fingers"
"frostbitten grapes unsalable as fresh fruit"
{adj: fruiting} capable of bearing fruit
{adj: fruity} tasting or smelling richly of or as of fruit
{adj: grapelike} resembling the fruit of a grape vine
{adj: green, unripe, unripened, immature} not fully developed or mature; not ripe
"unripe fruit"
"fried green tomatoes"
"green wood"
<-> ripe
{adj: heavy, weighed down} full of; bearing great weight
"trees heavy with fruit"
"vines weighed down with grapes"
{adj: homegrown} grown or originating in a particular place
"stands selling homegrown fruits and vegetables"
{adj: homozygous} having identical alleles at corresponding chromosomal loci
"these two fruit flies are homozygous for red eye color"
<-> heterozygous
{adj: indehiscent} (of e.g. fruits) not opening spontaneously at maturity to release seeds
<-> dehiscent
{adj: kiwi-sized} having the approximate size of a kiwi fruit
{adj: lush, succulent} full of juice
"lush fruits"
"succulent roast beef"
"succulent plants with thick fleshy leaves"
{adj: mellow, mellowed} having a full and pleasing flavor through proper aging
"a mellow port"
"mellowed fruit"
{adj: monocarpic} dying after bearing fruit only once
{adj: multiple} having or involving or consisting of more than one part or entity or individual
"multiple birth"
"multiple ownership"
"made multiple copies of the speech"
"his multiple achievements in public life"
"her multiple personalities"
"a pineapple is a multiple fruit"
<-> single
{adj: oval-fruited} bearing oval fruit
{adj: perishable} liable to perish; subject to destruction or death or decay
"this minute and perishable planet"
"perishable foods such as butter and fruit"
<-> imperishable
{adj: plumlike} resembling a plum fruit
{adj: red-fruited} bearing red fruit
{adj: round-fruited} bearing round fruit
{adj: shelled} of animals or fruits that have a shell
<-> unshelled
{adj: small-fruited} bearing small fruit
{adj: stoneless} (of fruits having stones) having the stone removed
"stoneless dried dates"
{adj: tropical, tropic} relating to or situated in or characteristic of the tropics (the region on either side of the equator)
"tropical islands"
"tropical fruit"
{adj: unshelled, shell-less} of animals or fruits that have no shell
<-> shelled
{n: Abyssinian banana, Ethiopian banana, Ensete ventricosum, Musa ensete} large evergreen arborescent herb having huge paddle-shaped leaves and bearing inedible fruit that resemble bananas but edible young flower shoots; sometimes placed in genus Musa
{n: Acer, genus Acer} type genus of the Aceraceae; trees or shrubs having winged fruit
{n: Achras, genus Achras} tropical trees having papery leaves and large fruit
{n: Actinidia, genus Actinidia} small Asiatic woody vine bearing many-seeded fruit
{n: Adapid, Adapid group} extinct small mostly diurnal lower primates that fed on leaves and fruit; abundant in North America and Europe 30 to 50 million years ago; their descendents probably include the lemurs; some authorities consider them ancestral to anthropoids but others consider them only cousins
{n: Alar, daminozide} a chemical sprayed on fruit trees to regulate their growth so the entire crop can be harvested at one time
{n: Albatrellus dispansus} a rare fungus having a large (up to 14 inches wide) yellow fruiting body with multiple individual caps and a broad central stalk and a fragrant odor
{n: Aleuria aurantia, orange peel fungus} a discomycete with bright orange cup-shaped or saucer-shaped fruiting bodies and pale orange exteriors
{n: Allegheny plum, Alleghany plum, sloe, Prunus alleghaniensis} wild plum of northeastern United States having dark purple fruits with yellow flesh
{n: American crab apple, garland crab, Malus coronaria} medium-sized tree of the eastern United States having pink blossoms and small yellow fruit
{n: American cranberry, large cranberry, Vaccinium macrocarpon} trailing red-fruited plant
{n: American elder, black elderberry, sweet elder, Sambucus canadensis} common elder of central and eastern North America bearing purple-black berries; fruit used in wines and jellies
{n: American mistletoe, Arceuthobium pusillum} small herb with scalelike leaves on reddish-brown stems and berrylike fruits; parasitic on spruce and larch trees
{n: American persimmon, possumwood, Diospyros virginiana} medium-sized tree of dry woodlands in the southern and eastern United States bearing yellow or orange very astringent fruit that is edible when fully ripe
{n: American red plum, August plum, goose plum, Prunus americana} wild plum trees of eastern and central North America having red-orange fruit with yellow flesh
{n: Ananas, genus Ananas} a genus of tropical American plants have sword-shaped leaves and a fleshy compound fruits composed of the fruits of several flowers (such as pineapples)
{n: Aphis, genus Aphis} type genus of the Aphididae: injurious to fruit trees and vegetables
{n: Arizona sycamore, Platanus wrightii} medium-sized tree of Arizona and adjacent regions having deeply lobed leaves and collective fruits in groups of 3 to 5
{n: Asiatic sweetleaf, sapphire berry, Symplocus paniculata} deciduous shrub of eastern Asia bearing decorative bright blue fruit
{n: Astreus pteridis} the largest earthstar; the fruiting body can measure 15 cm across when the rays are expanded
{n: Baccharis, genus Baccharis} shrubs of western hemisphere often having honey-scented flowers followed by silky thistlelike heads of tiny fruits; often used for erosion control
{n: Barbados gooseberry, Barbados-gooseberry vine, Pereskia aculeata} West Indian woody climber with spiny stems and numerous fragrant white flowers in panicles followed by small yellow to orange fruits
{n: Barbados gooseberry, blade apple} small yellow to orange fruit of the Barbados gooseberry cactus used in desserts and preserves and jellies
{n: Bartram Juneberry, Amelanchier bartramiana} open-growing shrub of eastern North America having pure white flowers and small waxy almost black fruits
{n: Belgian waffle} thick sweet waffle often eaten with ice cream or fruit sauce
{n: Bignoniaceae, family Bignoniaceae} trees or shrubs or woody vines or herbs having fruit resembling gourds or capsules; sometimes placed in the order Scrophulariales
{n: Blighia, genus Blighia} small genus of western African evergreen trees and shrubs bearing fleshy capsular three-seeded fruits edible when neither unripe nor overripe
{n: Bombacaceae, family Bombacaceae} tropical trees with large dry or fleshy fruit containing usually woolly seeds
{n: Boraginaceae, family Boraginaceae, borage family} a widely distributed family of plants distinguished by circinate flowers and nutlike fruit
{n: Brazilian guava, Psidium guineense} South American tree having fruit similar to the true guava
{n: Brazilian pepper tree, Schinus terebinthifolius} small Brazilian evergreen resinous tree or shrub having dark green leaflets and white flowers followed by bright red fruit; used as a street tree and lawn specimen
{n: Brickellia, genus Brickelia} genus of herbs of southwestern America having usually creamy florets followed by one-seeded fruits in a prominent bristly sheath
{n: Brunfelsia, genus Brunfelsia} genus of tropical American shrubs grown for their flowers followed by fleshy berrylike fruits
{n: Burbank, Luther Burbank} United States horticulturist who developed many new varieties of fruits and vegetables and flowers (1849-1926)
{n: California box elder, Acer negundo Californicum} maple of the Pacific coast of the United States; fruits are white when mature
{n: California laurel, California bay tree, Oregon myrtle, pepperwood, spice tree, sassafras laurel, California olive, mountain laurel, Umbellularia californica} Pacific coast tree having aromatic foliage and small umbellate flowers followed by olivelike fruit; yields a hard tough wood
{n: California nutmeg, nutmeg-yew, Torreya californica} California evergreen having a fruit resembling a nutmeg but with a strong turpentine flavor
{n: Calostoma cinnabarina} a gasteromycete with a leathery stalk and a fruiting body this globose and has a red spore case
{n: Calostoma lutescens} a gasteromycete with a leathery stalk and a fruiting body that is globose and has a pale yellow spore case
{n: Calostoma ravenelii} a gasteromycete with a leathery stalk and a fruiting body with a thin gelatinous spore case and elliptical spores
{n: Canada plum, Prunus nigra} small tree native to northeastern North America having oblong orange-red fruit
{n: Cantharellus, genus Cantharellus} a well-known genus of fungus; has funnel-shaped fruiting body; includes the chanterelles
{n: Carolina buckthorn, indian cherry, Rhamnus carolinianus} deciduous shrub of eastern and central United States having black berrylike fruit; golden-yellow in autumn
{n: Carolina moonseed, Cocculus carolinus} woody vine of southeastern United States resembling the common moonseed but having red fruits
{n: Caucasian walnut, Pterocarya fraxinifolia} medium-sized Caucasian much-branched tree distinguished from other walnut trees by its winged fruit
{n: Celastraceae, family Celastraceae, spindle-tree family, staff-tree family} trees and shrubs and woody vines usually having bright-colored fruits
{n: Celtis, genus Celtis} large genus of trees and shrubs with berrylike fruit
{n: Ceratitis, genus Ceratitis} Mediterranean fruit flies
{n: Chilean nut, Chile nut, Chile hazel, Chilean hazelnut, Guevina heterophylla, Guevina avellana} Chilean shrub bearing coral-red fruit with an edible seed resembling a hazelnut
{n: China tree, false dogwood, jaboncillo, chinaberry, Sapindus saponaria} evergreen of tropical America having pulpy fruit containing saponin which was used as soap by native Americans
{n: Chinese anise, star anise, star aniseed} anise-scented star-shaped fruit or seed used in Oriental cooking and medicine
{n: Chinese gooseberry, kiwi, kiwi vine, Actinidia chinensis, Actinidia deliciosa} climbing vine native to China; cultivated in New Zealand for its fuzzy edible fruit with green meat
{n: Chiroptera, order Chiroptera} an old order dating to early Eocene: bats: suborder Megachiroptera (fruit bats); suborder Microchiroptera (insectivorous bats)
{n: Christ's-thorn, Jerusalem thorn, Paliurus spina-christi} thorny Eurasian shrub with dry woody winged fruit
{n: Cladonia, genus Cladonia} type genus of Cladoniaceae; lichens characterized by a crustose thallus and capitate fruiting bodies borne on simple or branched podetia
{n: Clitocybe subconnexa} an edible white agaric that fruits in dense clusters; the gills are narrow and crowded and the stalk in fleshy and unpolished
{n: Colubrina, genus Colubrina} mostly tropical American shrubs or small trees with small yellowish flowers and yellow or red fruits
{n: Cynopterus sphinx} a variety of fruit eating bat
{n: Dipterocarpaceae, family Dipterocarpaceae} chiefly tropical Asian trees with two-winged fruits; yield valuable woods and aromatic oils and resins
{n: Disciotis venosa, cup morel} an edible morel with a cup-shaped or saucer-shaped fruiting body can be up to 20 cm wide; the fertile surface inside the cup has wrinkles radiating from the center; can be easily confused with inedible mushrooms
{n: Discomycetes, subclass Discomycetes} a large and taxonomically difficult group of Ascomycetes in which the fleshy fruiting body is disklike or cup-shaped
{n: Drosophilidae, family Drosophilidae} fruit flies
{n: Ebenaceae, family Ebenaceae, ebony family} fruit and timber trees of tropical and warm regions including ebony and persimmon
{n: Eccles cake} a flat round cake of sweetened pastry filled with dried fruit
{n: Eden, Garden of Eden} a beautiful garden where Adam and Eve were placed at the Creation; when they disobeyed and ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil they were driven from their paradise (the fall of man)
{n: English hawthorn, Crataegus monogyna} European hawthorn having deeply cleft leaves and bright red fruits; widely cultivated in many varieties and often grown as impenetrable hedges; established as an escape in eastern North America
{n: Entoloma aprile} an agaric with a dark brown conical cap; fruits in early spring
{n: Eriobotrya, genus Eriobotrya} Asiatic evergreen fruit trees
{n: Erythroxylaceae, family Erythroxylaceae} a family of plants of order Geraniales; have drupaceous fruit
{n: European cranberry, small cranberry, Vaccinium oxycoccus} small red-fruited trailing cranberry of Arctic and cool regions of the northern hemisphere
{n: European fly honeysuckle, European honeysuckle, Lonicera xylosteum} cultivated Eurasian shrub with twin yellowish-white flowers and scarlet fruit
{n: Fall of Man} (Judeo-Christian mythology) when Adam and Eve ate of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden, God punished them by driving them out of the Garden of Eden and into the world where they would be subject to sickness and pain and eventual death
{n: Fortunella, genus Fortunella} small genus of shrubs native to south China producing small ovoid fruits resembling oranges: includes kumquats
{n: French dressing for fruit salad} made with lemon or grapefruit juice instead of vinegar
{n: French toast} bread slice dipped in egg and milk and fried; topped with sugar or fruit or syrup
{n: Fructidor} twelfth month of the Revolutionary calendar (August and September); the month of fruit
{n: Galiella rufa} the cup-shaped fruiting body of this discomycete has a jellylike interior and a short stalk
{n: Gnetaceae, family Gnetaceae} plants having small unisexual flowers and fleshy or winged fruit: in some classifications includes the genera Ephedra and Welwitschia as well as genus Gnetum
{n: Grossulariaceae, family Grossulariaceae, gooseberry family} in some classifications considered a part of the family Saxifragaceae: plants whose fruit is a berry
{n: Gymnopilus spectabilis} a fungus with a brownish orange fruiting body and a ring near the top of the stalk; the taste is bitter and the flesh contains psilocybin and psilocin
{n: Gyromitra gigas} a gyromitra with a large irregular stalk and fertile part that is yellow to brown and wrinkled; has early fruiting time
{n: Helicteres, genus Helicteres} genus of shrubs and small trees of tropical America and Asia having cylindrical fruits spirally twisted around one another
{n: Hottentot fig, Hottentot's fig, sour fig, Carpobrotus edulis, Mesembryanthemum edule} low-growing South African succulent plant having a capsular fruit containing edible pulp
{n: Hydnocarpus laurifolia, Hydnocarpus wightiana} leathery-leaved tree of western India bearing round fruits with brown densely hairy rind enclosing oily pulp that yields hydnocarpus oil
{n: Jafnea semitosta} the fruiting bodies of this discomycete have a firm texture and long retain their cup shape; the pale brown interior blends with the color of dead leaves
{n: Jamaica honeysuckle, yellow granadilla, Passiflora laurifolia} West Indian passionflower; cultivated for its yellow edible fruit
{n: Jamaican cherry, calabur tree, calabura, silk wood, silkwood, Muntingia calabura} a fast-growing tropical American evergreen having white flowers and white fleshy edible fruit; bark yields a silky fiber used in cordage and wood is valuable for staves
{n: Japanese apricot, mei, Prunus mume} Japanese ornamental tree with fragrant white or pink blossoms and small yellow fruits
{n: Japanese bittersweet, Japan bittersweet, oriental bittersweet, Celastrus orbiculatus, Celastric articulatus} ornamental Asiatic vine with showy orange-yellow fruit with a scarlet aril; naturalized in North America
{n: Japanese flowering cherry, Prunus sieboldii} ornamental tree with inedible fruit widely cultivated in many varieties for its pink blossoms
{n: Japanese persimmon, kaki, Diospyros kaki} small deciduous Asiatic tree bearing large red or orange edible astringent fruit
{n: Jerusalem cherry, winter cherry, Madeira winter cherry, Solanum pseudocapsicum} small South American shrub cultivated as a houseplant for its abundant ornamental but poisonous red or yellow cherry-sized fruit
{n: Juneberry, serviceberry, service tree, shadbush, shadblow} any of various North American trees or shrubs having showy white flowers and edible blue-black or purplish fruit
{n: Lardizabalaceae, family Lardizabalaceae, lardizabala family} thick-stemmed lianas and some shrubs; some have edible fruit
{n: Lecythidaceae, family Lecythidaceae} large tropical trees bearing large fruits with woody skins
{n: Lemaireocereus, genus Lemaireocereus} tropical American cacti usually tall and branching with stout spines and funnel-shaped flowers and globular or ovoid often edible fruit
{n: Leotia lubrica} a discomycete that develops in clusters of slippery rubbery gelatinous fruiting bodies that are dingy yellow to tan in color
{n: Lepiota naucina} an agaric with greyish white fruiting body and gills that change from pink to dingy red
{n: Lycoperdales, order Lycoperdales} small order of basidiomycetous fungi having fleshy often globose fruiting bodies; includes puffballs and earthstars
{n: Lycoperdon, genus Lycoperdon} genus of fungi whose fruiting body tapers toward a base consisting of spongy mycelium
{n: Macowanites, genus Macowanites} a stout-stemmed genus of fungus belonging to the family Secotiaceae having fruiting bodies that never expand completely
{n: Mammea, genus Mammea} American and Asiatic trees having edible one-seeded fruit
{n: Mangifera, genus Mangifera} tropical tree native to Asia bearing fleshy fruit
{n: May apple} edible but insipid fruit of the May apple plant
{n: Mediterranean fruit fly, medfly, Ceratitis capitata} small black-and-white fly that damages citrus and other fruits by implanting eggs that hatch inside the fruit
{n: Megachiroptera, suborder Megachiroptera} fruit bats
{n: Melicytus, genus Melicytus} a genus of deciduous shrubs or trees; fruit is a berry; grow in New Zealand and Fiji and Solomon Islands
{n: Metroxylon, genus Metroxylon} a genus of Malayan pinnate-leaved palm trees that flower and fruit once and then die
{n: Microchiroptera, suborder Microchiroptera} most of the bats in the world; all bats except fruit bats insectivorous bats
{n: Moniliaceae, family Moniliaceae} family of imperfect fungi having white or brightly colored hyphae and spores that are produced directly on the mycelium and not aggregated in fruiting bodies
{n: Myristica, genus Myristica} type genus of Myristicaceae; tropical Asian evergreen trees with small white or yellow flowers followed by fleshy fruits
{n: Neohygrophorus angelesianus} a fungus with a small brown convex cap with a depressed disc; waxy wine-colored gills and a brown stalk; fruits in or near melting snow banks in the western mountains of North America
{n: Nesselrode, Nesselrode pudding} a rich frozen pudding made of chopped chestnuts and maraschino cherries and candied fruits and liqueur or rum
{n: Nyctimene, genus Nyctimene} East Indian fruit bats
{n: Olea, genus Olea} evergreen trees and shrubs having oily one-seeded fruits
{n: Oleaceae, family Oleaceae, olive family} trees and shrubs having berries or drupes or capsules as fruits; sometimes placed in the order Oleales: olive; ash; jasmine; privet; lilac
{n: Omomyid, Omomyid group} extinct tiny nocturnal lower primates that fed on fruit and insects; abundant in North America and Europe 30 to 50 million years ago; probably gave rise to the tarsiers; some authorities consider them ancestral to anthropoids but others consider them only cousins
{n: Oregon crab apple, Malus fusca} small tree or shrub of western United States having white blossoms and tiny yellow or red fruit
{n: Papaveraceae, family Papaveraceae, poppy family} herbs or shrubs having milky and often colored juices and capsular fruits
{n: Persian melon} the fruit of a variety of winter melon vine; a large green melon with orange flesh
{n: Peziza domicilina} a discomycetous fungus of the genus Peziza; the fragile fruiting body is a ghostly white but stains yellow when broken; favors strongly alkaline habitats
{n: Photinia, genus Photinia} genus of deciduous and evergreen east Asian trees and shrubs widely cultivated as ornamentals for their white flowers and red fruits; in some classifications includes genus Heteromeles
{n: Phytophthora citrophthora} causes brown rot gummosis in citrus fruits
{n: Pistacia, genus Pistacia} a dicotyledonous genus of trees of the family Anacardiaceae having drupaceous fruit
{n: Plectomycetes, class Plectomycetes} class of fungi in which the fruiting body is a cleistothecium (it releases spores only on decay or disintegration)
{n: Polyangium, genus Polyangium} type genus of the family Polyangiaceae: myxobacteria with rounded fruiting bodies enclosed in a membrane
{n: Pouteria, genus Pouteria} tropical American timber tree with edible fruit (canistel)
{n: Pteropus capestratus} a variety of fruit bat
{n: Pteropus hypomelanus} a variety of fruit bat
{n: Pyrenomycetes, class Pyrenomycetes} class of fungi in which the fruiting body is a perithecium; includes powdery mildews and ergot and Neurospora
{n: Pyrus, genus Pyrus} fruit trees native to the Old World: pears
{n: Rhamnaceae, family Rhamnaceae, buckthorn family} trees and shrubs usually thorny bearing drupaceous fruit many having medicinal value
{n: Rhipsalis, genus Rhipsalis} large genus of epiphytic or lithophytic unarmed cacti with usually segmented stems and pendulous branches; flowers are small followed by berrylike fruits
{n: Russian olive, silver berry, Elaeagnus augustifolia} deciduous shrubby tree of Europe and western Asia having grey leaves and small yellow fruits covered in silvery scales; sometimes spiny
{n: Salvadora, genus Salvadora} genus of evergreen trees or shrubs; fruit is a drupe; grows in Africa through Arabia to India and China
{n: San Jose scale, Aspidiotus perniciosus} small east Asian insect naturalized in the United States that damages fruit trees
{n: Santalaceae, family Santalaceae, sandalwood family} chiefly tropical herbs or shrubs or trees bearing nuts or one-seeded fruit
{n: Sapotaceae, family Sapotaceae, sapodilla family} tropical trees or shrubs with milky juice and often edible fleshy fruit
{n: Sarcoscypha coccinea, scarlet cup} a discomycete that is a harbinger of spring; the fruiting body is thin and tough and saucer-shaped (about the size of quarter to a half dollar) with a deep bright red upper surface and a whitish exterior
{n: Scleroderma flavidium, star earthball} an earthball with a smooth upper surface that is at first buried in sand; the top of the fruiting body opens up to form segments like the ray of an umbel
{n: Scleroderma, genus Scleroderma} genus of poisonous fungi having hard-skinned fruiting bodies: false truffles
{n: Scolytidae, family Scolytidae, Ipidae, family Ipidae} large family of bark-boring or wood-boring short-beaked beetles; very destructive to forest and fruit trees
{n: Siberian crab, Siberian crab apple, cherry apple, cherry crab, Malus baccata} Asian wild crab apple cultivated in many varieties for it small acid usually red fruit used for preserving
{n: Sierra plum, Pacific plum, Prunus subcordata} shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States bearing small red insipid fruit
{n: Simaroubaceae, family Simaroubaceae, quassia family} chiefly tropical trees and shrubs with bitter bark having dry usually one-seeded winged fruit
{n: Spanish lime, Spanish lime tree, honey berry, mamoncillo, genip, ginep, Melicocca bijuga, Melicocca bijugatus} tropical American tree bearing a small edible fruit with green leathery skin and sweet juicy translucent pulp
{n: Spanish tamarind, Vangueria madagascariensis} shrubby tree of Madagascar occasionally cultivated for its edible apple-shaped fruit
{n: Sphaeralcea, genus Sphaeralcea} large genus of chiefly tropical herbs with showy flowers and mostly globose fruits: globe mallows
{n: Spondias, genus Spondias} tropical trees having one-seeded fruit
{n: Suillus albivelatus} a short squat edible fungus with a reddish brown cap and white stalk; fruits under pines in the spring
{n: Surinam cherry, pitanga, Eugenia uniflora} Brazilian tree with spicy red fruit; often cultivated in California and Florida
{n: Tantalus} (Greek mythology) a wicked king and son of Zeus; condemned in Hades to stand in water that receded when he tried to drink and beneath fruit that receded when he reached for it
{n: Tremella foliacea} a jelly fungus with a fruiting body 5-15 cm broad and gelatinous in consistency; resembles a bunch of leaf lettuce; mostly water and brownish in color
{n: Tremella reticulata} a jelly fungus with an erect whitish fruiting body and a highly variable shape (sometimes resembling coral fungi)
{n: Truncocolumella citrina} a fungus with a round yellow to orange fruiting body that is found on the surface of the ground or partially buried; has a distinctive sterile column extending into the spore-bearing tissue
{n: Trypetidae, family Trypetidae, Trephritidae, family Trephritidae} fruit flies; some leaf miners
{n: Tuber, genus Tuber} type genus of the Tuberaceae: fungi whose fruiting bodies are typically truffles
{n: Vangueria, genus Vangueria} tropical African and Asiatic trees and shrubs having one-seeded fruit
{n: Verpa bohemica, early morel} resembles a thimble on a finger; the surface of the fertile portion is folded into wrinkles that extend from the top down; fruiting begins in spring before the leaves are out on the trees
{n: Virginia creeper, American ivy, woodbine, Parthenocissus quinquefolia} common North American vine with compound leaves and bluish-black berrylike fruit
{n: Virginia strawberry, scarlet strawberry, Fragaria virginiana} North American wild strawberry with sweet scarlet fruit; a source of many cultivated strawberries
{n: Western sand cherry, Rocky Mountains cherry, Prunus besseyi} dwarf ornamental shrub of western United States having large black to red and yellow sweet edible fruit
{n: Xylomelum, genus Xylomelum} small species of Australian trees or shrubs; grown for their fruit and flowers
{n: Zygocactus, genus Zygocactus} small genus of Brazilian cacti having flat fleshy usually branched joints and showy red or pink flowers followed by red fleshy fruits
{n: abscission} shedding of flowers and leaves and fruit following formation of scar tissue in a plant
{n: accessory fruit, pseudocarp} fruit containing much fleshy tissue besides that of the ripened ovary; as apple or strawberry
{n: acerola, barbados cherry, surinam cherry, West Indian cherry} acid red or yellow cherry-like fruit of a tropical American shrub very rich in vitamin C
{n: acervulus} small asexual fruiting body resembling a cushion or blister consisting of a mat of hyphae that is produced on a host by some fungi
{n: achene} small dry indehiscent fruit with the seed distinct from the fruit wall
{n: acinus} one of the small drupes making up an aggregate or multiple fruit like a blackberry
{n: ackee, akee} red pear-shaped tropical fruit with poisonous seeds; flesh is poisonous when unripe or overripe
{n: acorn squash} squash plant bearing small acorn-shaped fruits having yellow flesh and dark green or yellow rind with longitudinal ridges
{n: acorn} fruit of the oak tree: a smooth thin-walled nut in a woody cup-shaped base
{n: aecium} fruiting body of some rust fungi bearing chains of aeciospores
{n: aggregate fruit, multiple fruit, syncarp} fruit consisting of many individual small fruits or drupes derived from separate ovaries within a common receptacle: e.g. blackberry; raspberry; pineapple
{n: akee, akee tree, Blighia sapida} widely cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions for its fragrant flowers and colorful fruits; introduced in Jamaica by William Bligh
{n: alder, alder tree} north temperate shrubs or trees having toothed leaves and conelike fruit; bark is used in tanning and dyeing and the wood is rot-resistant
{n: alderleaf Juneberry, alder-leaved serviceberry, Amelanchier alnifolia} shrub or small tree of northwestern North America having fragrant creamy white flowers and small waxy purple-red fruits
{n: allspice} ground dried berrylike fruit of a West Indian allspice tree; suggesting combined flavors of cinnamon and nutmeg and cloves
{n: amarelle, Prunus cerasus caproniana} any of several cultivated sour cherry trees bearing pale red fruit with colorless juice
{n: ambrosia} fruit dessert made of oranges and bananas with shredded coconut
{n: anchovy pear, anchovy pear tree, Grias cauliflora} West Indian tree bearing edible fruit resembling mango
{n: anchovy pear, river pear} West Indian fruit resembling the mango; often pickled
{n: angiocarp} tree bearing fruit enclosed in a shell or involucre or husk
{n: apple of Peru, shoo fly, Nicandra physaloides} coarse South American herb grown for its blue-and-white flowers followed by a bladderlike fruit enclosing a dry berry
{n: apple tree} any tree of the genus Malus especially those bearing firm rounded edible fruits
{n: apple, orchard apple tree, Malus pumila} native Eurasian tree widely cultivated in many varieties for its firm rounded edible fruits
{n: applecart} a handcart from which apples and other fruit are sold in the street
{n: apple} fruit with red or yellow or green skin and sweet to tart crisp whitish flesh
{n: apricot bar} fruit bar containing apricot jam
{n: apricot, apricot tree} Asian tree having clusters of usually white blossoms and edible fruit resembling the peach
{n: apricot} downy yellow to rosy-colored fruit resembling a small peach
{n: ascocarp} mature fruiting body of an ascomycetous fungus
{n: avocado, alligator pear, avocado pear, aguacate} a pear-shaped tropical fruit with green or blackish skin and rich yellowish pulp enclosing a single large seed
{n: avocado, avocado tree, Persea Americana} tropical American tree bearing large pulpy green fruits
{n: balsam apple, Momordica balsamina} a tropical Old World flowering vine with red or orange warty fruit
{n: balsam pear, Momordica charantia} tropical Old World vine with yellow-orange fruit
{n: banana passion fruit, Passiflora mollissima} cultivated for fruit
{n: banana, banana tree} any of several tropical and subtropical treelike herbs of the genus Musa having a terminal crown of large entire leaves and usually bearing hanging clusters of elongated fruits
{n: banana} elongated crescent-shaped yellow fruit with soft sweet flesh
{n: banksia} any shrub or tree of the genus Banksia having alternate leathery leaves apetalous yellow flowers often in showy heads and conelike fruit with winged seeds
{n: baobab, monkey-bread tree, Adansonia digitata} African tree having an exceedingly thick trunk and fruit that resembles a gourd and has an edible pulp called monkey bread
{n: barbados cherry, acerola, Surinam cherry, West Indian cherry, Malpighia glabra} tropical American shrub bearing edible acid red fruit resembling cherries
{n: barrel cactus} a cactus of the genus Ferocactus: unbranched barrel-shaped cactus having deep ribs with numerous spines and usually large funnel-shaped flowers followed by dry fruits
{n: basidiocarp} the fruiting body of a basidiomycete which bears its spores on special cells
{n: beach plum, beach plum bush, Prunus maritima} seacoast shrub of northeastern North America having showy white blossoms and edible purple fruit
{n: beach plum} small dark purple fruit used especially in jams and pies
{n: bean tree} any of several trees having seedpods as fruits
{n: bean} any of various seeds or fruits that are beans or resemble beans
{n: beauty bush, Kolkwitzia amabilis} Chinese deciduous shrub with yellow-throated pinkish flowers and bristly fruit; often cultivated as an ornamental
{n: bell apple, sweet cup, water lemon, yellow granadilla} the edible yellow fruit of the Jamaica honeysuckle
{n: bergamot, bergamot orange, Citrus bergamia} small tree with pear-shaped fruit whose oil is used in perfumery; Italy
{n: berry} a small fruit having any of various structures, e.g., simple (grape or blueberry) or aggregate (blackberry or raspberry)
{n: berry} any of numerous small and pulpy edible fruits; used as desserts or in making jams and jellies and preserves
{n: beta-carotene} an isomer of carotene that is found in dark green and dark yellow fruits and vegetables
{n: betel palm, Areca catechu} southeastern Asian palm bearing betel nuts (scarlet or orange single-seeded fruit with a fibrous husk)
{n: biennial} a plant having a life cycle that normally takes two seasons from germination to death to complete; flowering biennials usually bloom and fruit in the second season
{n: big-tree plum, Prunus mexicana} small tree of southwestern United States having purplish-red fruit sometimes cultivated as an ornamental for its large leaves
{n: bilimbi, Averrhoa bilimbi} East Indian evergreen tree bearing very acid fruit
{n: bird cherry, bird cherry tree} any of several small-fruited cherry trees frequented or fed on by birds
{n: bird pepper, Capsicum frutescens baccatum, Capsicum baccatum} plant bearing very small and very hot oblong red fruits; includes wild forms native to tropical America; thought to be ancestral to the sweet pepper and many hot peppers
{n: black cherry, black cherry tree, rum cherry, Prunus serotina} large North American wild cherry with round black sour edible fruit
{n: black haw, Viburnum prunifolium} upright deciduous shrub having frosted dark-blue fruit; east and east central North America
{n: black huckleberry, Gaylussacia baccata} low shrub of the eastern United States bearing shiny black edible fruit; best known of the huckleberries
{n: black mulberry, Morus nigra} European mulberry having dark foliage and fruit
{n: black raspberry, blackcap, blackcap raspberry, thimbleberry, Rubus occidentalis} raspberry native to eastern North America having black thimble-shaped fruit
{n: black rot} a fungous disease causing darkening and decay of the leaves of fruits and vegetables
{n: blackberry} large sweet black or very dark purple edible aggregate fruit of any of various bushes of the genus Rubus
{n: blackthorn, sloe, Prunus spinosa} a thorny Eurasian bush with plumlike fruits
{n: blue cohosh, blueberry root, papooseroot, papoose root, squawroot, squaw root, Caulophyllum thalictrioides, Caulophyllum thalictroides} tall herb of eastern North America and Asia having blue berrylike fruit and a thick knotty rootstock formerly used medicinally
{n: blue elder, blue elderberry, Sambucus caerulea} shrub or small tree of western United States having white flowers and blue berries; fruit used in wines and jellies
{n: bonbon} a candy that usually has a center of fondant or fruit or nuts coated in chocolate
{n: bottle gourd, calabash, Lagenaria siceraria} Old World climbing plant with hard-shelled bottle-shaped gourds as fruits
{n: bourtree, black elder, common elder, elderberry, European elder, Sambucus nigra} a common shrub with black fruit or a small tree of Europe and Asia; fruit used for wines and jellies
{n: bower actinidia, tara vine, Actinidia arguta} climbing Asiatic vine having long finely serrate leaves and racemes of white flowers followed by greenish-yellow edible fruit
{n: bowl} a round vessel that is open at the top; used for holding fruit or liquids or for serving food
{n: boysenberry, boysenberry bush} cultivated hybrid bramble of California having large dark wine-red fruit with a flavor resembling raspberries
{n: boysenberry} large raspberry-flavored fruit; cross between blackberries and raspberries
{n: bramble bush} any prickly shrub of the genus Rubus bearing edible aggregate fruits
{n: brandy} distilled from wine or fermented fruit juice
{n: breadfruit, breadfruit tree, Artocarpus communis, Artocarpus altilis} native to Pacific islands and having edible fruit with a texture like bread
{n: breadfruit} a large round seedless or seeded fruit with a texture like bread; eaten boiled or baked or roasted or ground into flour; the roasted seeds resemble chestnuts
{n: bristly sarsaparilla, bristly sarsparilla, dwarf elder, Aralia hispida} bristly herb of eastern and central North America having black fruit and medicinal bark
{n: browntail, brown-tail moth, Euproctis phaeorrhoea} small brown and white European moth introduced into eastern United States; pest of various shade and fruit trees
{n: buckleya, Buckleya distichophylla} parasitic shrub of the eastern United States having opposite leaves and insignificant greenish flowers followed by oily dull green olivelike fruits
{n: buckthorn berry, yellow berry} fruit of various buckthorns yielding dyes or pigments
{n: buckthorn} a shrub or shrubby tree of the genus Rhamnus; fruits are source of yellow dyes or pigments
{n: buffalo nut, elk nut, oil nut} oily drupaceous fruit of rabbitwood
{n: bullace, Prunus insititia} small wild or half-domesticated Eurasian plum bearing small ovoid fruit in clusters
{n: bullock's heart, Jamaica apple} large heart-shaped tropical fruit with soft acid pulp
{n: bullock's heart, bullock's heart tree, bullock heart, Annona reticulata} small tropical American tree bearing a bristly heart-shaped acid tropical fruit
{n: bur marigold, burr marigold, beggar-ticks, beggar's-ticks, sticktight} any of several plants of the genus Bidens having yellow flowers and prickly fruits that cling to fur and clothing
{n: bur reed} marsh plant having elongated linear leaves and round prickly fruit
{n: buttercup squash} plant bearing somewhat drum-shaped fruit having dark green rind with greyish markings
{n: butternut squash, Cucurbita maxima} plant bearing buff-colored squash having somewhat bottle-shaped fruit with fine-textured edible flesh and a smooth thin rind
{n: button tree, button mangrove, Conocarpus erectus} evergreen tree or shrub with fruit resembling buttons and yielding heavy hard compact wood
{n: caltrop, devil's weed, Tribulus terestris} tropical annual procumbent poisonous subshrub having fruit that splits into five spiny nutlets; serious pasture weed
{n: candied fruit, crystallized fruit} fruit cooked in sugar syrup and encrusted with a sugar crystals
{n: candy, confect} a rich sweet made of flavored sugar and often combined with fruit or nuts
{n: cane blight} a disease affecting the canes of various bush fruits (e.g., raspberries or currants)
{n: canistel, canistel tree, Pouteria campechiana nervosa} tropical tree of Florida and West Indies yielding edible fruit
{n: canistel, eggfruit} ovoid orange-yellow mealy sweet fruit of Florida and West Indies
{n: cankerworm} green caterpillar of a geometrid moth; pest of various fruit and shade trees
{n: cantaloup, cantaloupe} the fruit of a cantaloup vine; small to medium-sized melon with yellowish flesh
{n: cantaloupe, cantaloup, cantaloupe vine, cantaloup vine, Cucumis melo cantalupensis} a variety of muskmelon vine having fruit with a tan rind and orange flesh
{n: cap, pileus} a fruiting structure resembling an umbrella that forms the top of a stalked fleshy fungus such as a mushroom
{n: cape gooseberry, purple ground cherry, Physalis peruviana} annual of tropical South America having edible purple fruits
{n: capulin, capulin tree, Prunus capuli} Mexican black cherry tree having edible fruit
{n: caracolito, Ruptiliocarpon caracolito} large Costa Rican tree having light-colored wood suitable for cabinetry; similar to the African lepidobotrys in wood structure as well as in fruit and flowers and leaves and seeds; often classified in other families
{n: carambola, carambola tree, Averrhoa carambola} East Indian tree bearing deeply ridged yellow-brown fruit
{n: carambola, star fruit} deeply ridged yellow-brown tropical fruit; used raw as a vegetable or in salad or when fully ripe as a dessert
{n: carissa plum, natal plum} edible scarlet plumlike fruit of a South African plant
{n: carissa} a shrub of the genus Carissa having fragrant white flowers and plumlike red to purple-black fruits
{n: cattley guava, purple strawberry guava, Psidium cattleianum, Psidium littorale longipes} small tropical shrubby tree bearing deep red oval fruit
{n: ceriman, Monstera deliciosa} tropical American vine having roots that hang like cords and cylindrical fruit with a pineapple and banana flavor
{n: ceriman, monstera} tropical cylindrical fruit resembling a pinecone with pineapple-banana flavor
{n: charlotte} a mold lined with cake or crumbs and filled with fruit or whipped cream or custard
{n: cheese fondue} fondue made of cheese melted in wine for dipping bread and sometimes fruits
{n: cherimoya, cherimolla} large tropical fruit with leathery skin and soft pulp; related to custard apples
{n: cherimoya, cherimoya tree, Annona cherimola} small tropical American tree bearing round or oblong fruit
{n: cherry pepper, Capsicum annuum cerasiforme} plant bearing small rounded usually pungent fruits
{n: cherry plum, myrobalan, myrobalan plum, Prunus cerasifera} small Asiatic tree bearing edible red or yellow fruit; used in Europe as budding stock
{n: cherry tomato, Lycopersicon esculentum cerasiforme} plant bearing small red to yellow fruit
{n: cherry, cherry tree} any of numerous trees and shrubs producing a small fleshy round fruit with a single hard stone; many also produce a valuable hardwood
{n: cherry} a red fruit with a single hard stone
{n: chichipe, Lemaireocereus chichipe} tall treelike Mexican cactus with edible red fruit
{n: chickasaw plum, hog plum, hog plum bush, Prunus angustifolia} small native American shrubby tree bearing small edible yellow to reddish fruit
{n: chinaberry, chinaberry tree, China tree, Persian lilac, pride-of-India, azederach, azedarach, Melia azederach, Melia azedarach} tree of northern India and China having purple blossoms and small inedible yellow fruits; naturalized in the southern United States as a shade tree
{n: chocolate fondue} fondue made of chocolate melted with milk or cream for dipping fruits
{n: chokecherry} the fruit of the chokecherry tree
{n: chowchow} a Chinese preserve of mixed fruits and ginger
{n: chutney, Indian relish} chopped fruits or green tomatoes cooked in vinegar and sugar with ginger and spices
{n: cinnabar chanterelle, Cantharellus cinnabarinus} mushroom with a distinctive pink to vermillion fruiting body
{n: citric acid} a weak water-soluble acid found in many fruits (especially citrus fruits); used as a flavoring agent
{n: citron, citron tree, Citrus medica} thorny evergreen small tree or shrub of India widely cultivated for its large lemonlike fruits that have thick warty rind
{n: citron} large lemonlike fruit with thick aromatic rind; usually preserved
{n: citrus, citrus fruit, citrous fruit} any of numerous fruits of the genus Citrus having thick rind and juicy pulp; grown in warm regions
{n: citrus, citrus tree} any of numerous tropical usually thorny evergreen trees of the genus Citrus having leathery evergreen leaves and widely cultivated for their juicy edible fruits having leathery aromatic rinds
{n: claret cup} a punch made of claret and brandy with lemon juice and sugar and sometimes sherry or curacao and fresh fruit
{n: clear liquid diet} a diet of fluids with minimal residues (fat-free broth or strained fruit juices or gelatin); cannot be used for more than one day postoperative
{n: cling, clingstone} fruit (especially peach) whose flesh adheres strongly to the pit
{n: cobbler} tall sweetened iced drink of wine or liquor with fruit
{n: cock's eggs, Salpichroa organifolia, Salpichroa rhomboidea} weedy vine of Argentina having solitary white flowers followed by egg-shaped white or yellow fruit
{n: coco plum, coco plum tree, cocoa plum, icaco, Chrysobalanus icaco} small tropical American tree bearing edible plumlike fruit
{n: cocoa plum, coco plum, icaco} plum-shaped whitish to almost black fruit used for preserves; tropical American
{n: coconut, coconut palm, coco palm, coco, cocoa palm, coconut tree, Cocos nucifera} tall palm tree bearing coconuts as fruits; widely planted throughout the tropics
{n: cocozelle, Italian vegetable marrow} squash plant having dark green fruit with skin mottled with light green or yellow
{n: coffee ring} ring-shaped coffeecake with fruits or nuts and often iced
{n: coffeeberry, California buckthorn, California coffee, Rhamnus californicus} evergreen shrub of western United States bearing small red or black fruits
{n: collins, Tom Collins} tall iced drink of liquor (usually gin) with fruit juice
{n: comfit} candy containing a fruit or nut
{n: common St John's wort, tutsan, Hypericum androsaemum} deciduous bushy Eurasian shrub with golden yellow flowers and reddish-purple fruits from which a soothing salve is made in Spain
{n: common alder, European black alder, Alnus glutinosa, Alnus vulgaris} medium-sized tree with brown-black bark and woody fruiting catkins; leaves are hairy beneath
{n: common apricot, Prunus armeniaca} temperate zone tree bearing downy yellow to rosy fruits
{n: common moonseed, Canada moonseed, yellow parilla, Menispermum canadense} a woody vine of eastern North America having large oval leaves and small white flowers and purple to blue-black fruits
{n: common spindle tree, Euonymus europaeus} small erect deciduous shrub having tough white wood and cathartic bark and fruit
{n: compote, fruit compote} dessert of stewed or baked fruit
{n: conacaste, elephant's ear, Enterolobium cyclocarpa} tropical South American tree having a wide-spreading crown of bipinnate leaves and coiled ear-shaped fruits; grown for shade and ornament as well as valuable timber
{n: cone pepper, Capsicum annuum conoides} plant bearing erect pungent conical red or yellow or purple fruits; sometimes grown as an ornamental
{n: confiture} preserved or candied fruit
{n: conserve, preserve, conserves, preserves} fruit preserved by cooking with sugar
{n: cooler} an iced drink especially white wine and fruit juice
{n: coralberry, Indian currant, Symphoricarpos orbiculatus} North American deciduous shrub cultivated for it abundant clusters of coral-red berrylike fruits
{n: cornelian cherry, Cornus mas} deciduous European shrub or small tree having bright red fruit
{n: costermonger, barrow-man, barrow-boy} a hawker of fruit and vegetables from a barrow
{n: cotoneaster} any shrub of the genus Cotoneaster: erect or creeping shrubs having richly colored autumn foliage and many small white to pinkish flowers followed by tiny red or black fruits
{n: cowpea, black-eyed pea} fruit or seed of the cowpea plant
{n: crab apple, crabapple, cultivated crab apple} any of numerous varieties of crab apples cultivated for their small acid (usually bright red) fruit used for preserving or as ornamentals for their blossoms
{n: cream-of-tartar tree, sour gourd, Adansonia gregorii} Australian tree having an agreeably acid fruit that resembles a gourd
{n: crowberry} a low evergreen shrub with small purple flowers and black berrylike fruit
{n: crown gall} a bacterial disease of plants (especially pome and stone fruits and grapes and roses) which forms excrescences on the stem near the ground
{n: cubeb, cubeb vine, Java pepper, Piper cubeba} tropical southeast Asian shrubby vine bearing spicy berrylike fruits
{n: cubeb} spicy fruit of the cubeb vine; when dried and crushed is used medicinally or in perfumery and sometimes smoked in cigarettes
{n: cucumber tree, Magnolia acuminata} American deciduous magnolia having large leaves and fruit like a small cucumber
{n: cucumber, cucumber vine, Cucumis sativus} a melon vine of the genus Cucumis; cultivated from earliest times for its cylindrical green fruit
{n: cucumber, cuke} cylindrical green fruit with thin green rind and white flesh eaten as a vegetable; related to melons
{n: currawong, bell magpie} bluish black fruit-eating bird with a bell-like call
{n: cushaw, Cucurbita mixta, Cucurbita argyrosperma} plant bearing squash having globose to ovoid fruit with variously striped grey and green and white warty rinds
{n: custard apple, custard apple tree} any of several tropical American trees bearing fruit with soft edible pulp
{n: custard apple} the fruit of any of several tropical American trees of the genus Annona having soft edible pulp
{n: cymling, pattypan squash} squash plant having flattened round fruit with a scalloped edge; usually greenish white
{n: damson plum, damson plum tree, Prunus domestica insititia} plum tree long cultivated for its edible fruit
{n: dangleberry, dangle-berry, Gaylussacia frondosa} huckleberry of the eastern United States with pink flowers and sweet blue fruit
{n: danish, danish pastry} light sweet yeast-raised roll usually filled with fruits or cheese
{n: date bar} fruit bar containing chopped dates
{n: date palm, Phoenix dactylifera} tall tropical feather palm tree native to Syria bearing sweet edible fruit
{n: date plum, Diospyros lotus} an Asiatic persimmon tree cultivated for its small yellow or purplish-black edible fruit much valued by Afghan tribes
{n: date} sweet edible fruit of the date palm with a single long woody seed
{n: dead-man's-fingers, dead-men's-fingers, Xylaria polymorpha} the fruiting bodies of the fungi of the genus Xylaria
{n: deep-dish pie, cobbler} made of fruit with rich biscuit dough usually only on top of the fruit
{n: dehiscence} (biology) release of material by splitting open of an organ or tissue; the natural bursting open at maturity of a fruit or other reproductive body to release seeds or spores or the bursting open of a surgically closed wound
{n: devilwood, American olive, Osmanthus americanus} small tree of southern United States having panicles of dull white flowers followed by dark purple fruits
{n: dewberry} blackberry-like fruits of any of several trailing blackberry bushes
{n: dextrose, dextroglucose, grape sugar} an isomer of glucose that is found in honey and sweet fruits
{n: dillenia} any of several evergreen trees or shrubs of the genus Dillenia grown for their foliage and nodding flowers resembling magnolias which are followed by fruit that is used in curries and jellies and preserves
{n: draba} any of numerous low-growing cushion-forming plants of the genus Draba having rosette-forming leaves and terminal racemes of small flowers with scapose or leafy stems; fruit is a dehiscent oblong or linear silique
{n: dragee} sugar-coated nut or fruit piece
{n: dried fruit} fruit preserved by drying
{n: drosophila, Drosophila melanogaster} small fruit fly used by Thomas Hunt Morgan in studying basic mechanisms of inheritance
{n: drupe, stone fruit} fleshy indehiscent fruit with a single seed: e.g. almond; peach; plum; cherry; elderberry; olive; jujube
{n: drupelet} a small part of an aggregate fruit that resembles a drupe
{n: dry rot} a crumbling and drying of timber or bulbs or potatoes or fruit caused by a fungus
{n: dry unit, dry measure} a unit of capacity for dry commodities (as fruit or grain)
{n: dumpling} dessert made by baking fruit wrapped in pastry
{n: durian, durion, durian tree, Durio zibethinus} tree of southeastern Asia having edible oval fruit with a hard spiny rind
{n: durian} huge fruit native to southeastern Asia `smelling like Hell and tasting like Heaven'; seeds are roasted and eaten like nuts
{n: dwarf banana, Musa acuminata} low-growing Asian banana tree cultivated especially in the West Indies for its clusters of edible yellow fruit
{n: dwarf flowering almond, Prunus glandulosa} small Chinese shrub with smooth unfurrowed dark red fruit grown especially for its red or pink or white flowers
{n: ear, spike, capitulum} fruiting spike of a cereal plant especially corn
{n: earthball, false truffle, puffball, hard-skinned puffball} any of various fungi of the genus Scleroderma having hard-skinned subterranean fruiting bodies resembling truffles
{n: edible banana, Musa paradisiaca sapientum} widely cultivated species of banana trees bearing compact hanging clusters of commercially important edible yellow fruit
{n: edible fruit} edible reproductive body of a seed plant especially one having sweet flesh
{n: eggplant, aubergine, brinjal, eggplant bush, garden egg, mad apple, Solanum melongena} hairy upright herb native to southeastern Asia but widely cultivated for its large glossy edible fruit commonly used as a vegetable
{n: elder, elderberry bush} any of numerous shrubs or small trees of temperate and subtropical northern hemisphere having white flowers and berrylike fruit
{n: elderberry} berrylike fruit of an elder used for e.g. wines and jellies
{n: epergne} a large table centerpiece with branching holders for fruit or sweets or flowers
{n: epicarp, exocarp} outermost layer of the pericarp of fruits as the skin of a peach or grape
{n: espalier} a trellis on which ornamental shrub or fruit tree is trained to grow flat
{n: evergreen bittersweet, Euonymus fortunei radicans, Euonymus radicans vegetus} broad and bushy Asiatic twining shrub with pinkish fruit; many subspecies or varieties
{n: evergreen blueberry, Vaccinium myrsinites} shrub of the eastern United States having shining evergreen leaves and bluish-black fruit
{n: fairy bluebird, bluebird} fruit-eating mostly brilliant blue songbird of the East Indies
{n: false truffle} any of various fungi of the family Rhizopogonaceae having subterranean fruiting bodies similar to the truffle
{n: feijoa, feijoa bush} South American shrub having edible greenish plumlike fruit
{n: feijoa, pineapple guava} dark-green kiwi-sized tropical fruit with white flesh; used chiefly for jellies and preserves
{n: field crop} a crop (other than fruits or vegetables) that is grown for agricultural purposes
"cotton, hay, and grain are field crops"
{n: fig, common fig, common fig tree, Ficus carica} Mediterranean tree widely cultivated for its edible fruit
{n: fig-bird} greenish-yellow Australian oriole feeding chiefly on figs and other fruits
{n: fig} fleshy sweet pear-shaped yellowish or purple multiple fruit eaten fresh or preserved or dried
{n: flan} open pastry filled with fruit or custard
{n: floccose chanterelle, Cantharellus floccosus} a mildly poisonous fungus with a fruiting body shaped like a hollow trumpet
{n: flowering almond, oriental bush cherry, Prunus japonica} woody oriental plant with smooth unfurrowed red fruit grown especially for its white or pale pink blossoms
{n: flowering raspberry, purple-flowering raspberry, Rubus odoratus, thimbleberry} shrubby raspberry of eastern North America having showy rose to purplish flowers and red or orange thimble-shaped fruit
{n: fondue, fondu} hot cheese or chocolate melted to the consistency of a sauce into which bread or fruits are dipped
{n: forbidden fruit} originally an apple from the tree of knowledge of good and evil in the Garden of Eden; it is now used to refer to anything that is tempting but dangerous (as sexuality)
{n: fragrant sumac, lemon sumac, Rhus aromatica} sweet-scented sumac of eastern America having ternate leaves and yellowish-green flowers in spikes resembling catkins followed by red hairy fruits
{n: frail} a basket for holding dried fruit (especially raisins or figs)
{n: freestone} fruit (especially peach) whose flesh does not adhere to the pit
{n: fritter} small quantity of fried batter containing fruit or meat or vegetables
{n: fructification} organs of fruiting (especially the reproductive parts of ferns and mosses)
{n: fructification} the bearing of fruit
{n: fructose, fruit sugar, levulose, laevulose} a simple sugar found in honey and in many ripe fruits
{n: fruit bar} cookies containing chopped fruits either mixed in the dough or spread between layers of dough then baked and cut in bars
{n: fruit bat, megabat} large Old World bat of warm and tropical regions that feeds on fruit
{n: fruit cocktail} a mixture of sliced or diced fruits
{n: fruit custard} a custard containing fruit
{n: fruit drink, ade} a sweetened beverage of diluted fruit juice
{n: fruit fly, pomace fly} any of numerous small insects whose larvae feed on fruits
{n: fruit grower} someone who grows fruit commercially
{n: fruit juice, fruit crush} drink produced by squeezing or crushing fruit
{n: fruit machine} a coin-operated gambling machine that produces random combinations of symbols (usually pictures of different fruits) on rotating dials; certain combinations win money for the player
{n: fruit of the poisonous tree} a rule that once primary evidence is determined to have been illegally obtained any secondary evidence following from it may also not be used
{n: fruit punch} a punch made of fruit juices mixed with water or soda water (with or without alcohol)
{n: fruit salad} salad composed of fruits
{n: fruit tree} tree bearing edible fruit
{n: fruitage} the yield of fruit
"a tree highly recommended for its fruitage"
{n: fruitcake} a rich cake containing dried fruit and nuts and citrus peel and so on
{n: fruiterer} a person who sells fruit
{n: fruiting body} an organ specialized for producing spores
{n: fruition} the condition of bearing fruit
{n: fruitlet} a diminutive fruit, especially one that is part of a multiple fruit
{n: fruitwood} wood of various fruit trees (as apple or cherry or pear) used especially in cabinetwork
{n: fruit} the consequence of some effort or action
"he lived long enough to see the fruit of his policies"
{n: fruit} the ripened reproductive body of a seed plant
{n: garambulla, garambulla cactus, Myrtillocactus geometrizans} arborescent cactus of western Mexico bearing a small oblong edible berrylike fruit
{n: garambulla} small berrylike fruit
{n: garden pea} the flattened to cylindric inflated multi-seeded fruit of the common pea plant
{n: garden} the flowers or vegetables or fruits or herbs that are cultivated in a garden
{n: geebung} any of numerous shrubs and small trees having hard narrow leaves and long-lasting yellow or white flowers followed by small edible but insipid fruits
{n: gelatin dessert} jellied dessert made with gelatin and fruit juice or water
{n: genip, Spanish lime} round one-inch Caribbean fruit with green leathery skin and sweet juicy translucent pulp; eaten like grapes
{n: genipap fruit, jagua, marmalade box, Genipa Americana} tree of the West Indies and northern South America bearing succulent edible orange-sized fruit
{n: genipap, genipap fruit} a succulent orange-sized tropical fruit with a thick rind
{n: genipa} any tree of the genus Genipa bearing yellow flowers and edible fruit with a thick rind
{n: genus Agrimonia} genus of herbs found chiefly in north temperate regions having pinnate leaves and yellow flowers followed by bristly fruit
{n: genus Capsicum, Capsicum} chiefly tropical perennial shrubby plants having many-seeded fruits: sweet and hot peppers
{n: genus Cyrilla} one species: trees and shrubs having flowers with acute or twisted petals and wingless fruit
{n: genus Discina} a genus of fungi of the family Helvellaceae with a cup-shaped or saucer-shaped fruiting body and ornamented spores
{n: genus Genipa} tropical American evergreen trees or shrubs bearing yellow flowers and succulent edible fruit with a thick rind
{n: globe mallow, false mallow} genus of coarse herbs and subshrubs of arid North and South America having pink or scarlet flowers and globose fruits
{n: gourd, gourd vine} any vine of the family Cucurbitaceae that bears fruits with hard rinds
{n: gourd} any of numerous inedible fruits with hard rinds
{n: governor's plum, governor plum, Madagascar plum, ramontchi, batoko palm, Flacourtia indica} small shrubby tree of Madagascar cultivated in tropical regions as a hedge plant and for its deep red acid fruits resembling small plums
{n: grain, caryopsis} dry seedlike fruit produced by the cereal grasses: e.g. wheat, barley, Indian corn
{n: granadilla, giant granadilla, Passiflora quadrangularis} tropical American passionflower yielding the large granadilla fruit
{n: granadilla, purple granadillo, Passiflora edulis} Brazilian passionflower cultivated for its deep purple fruit
{n: granadilla, sweet granadilla, Passiflora ligularis} considered best for fruit
{n: granadilla} the egg-shaped edible fruit of tropical American vines related to passionflowers
{n: granola} cereal made of especially rolled oats with dried fruits and nuts and honey or brown sugar
{n: grapefruit, Citrus paradisi} citrus tree bearing large round edible fruit having a thick yellow rind and juicy somewhat acid pulp
{n: grapefruit} large yellow fruit with somewhat acid juicy pulp; usual serving consists of a half
{n: grape} any of various juicy fruit of the genus Vitis with green or purple skins; grow in clusters
{n: greengrocer} a grocer who sells fresh fruits and vegetables
{n: groundsel tree, groundsel bush, consumption weed, cotton-seed tree, Baccharis halimifolia} a shrub of salt marshes of eastern and south central North America and West Indies; fruit is surrounded with white plumelike hairy tufts
{n: guava, strawberry guava, yellow cattley guava, Psidium littorale} small tropical shrubby tree bearing small yellowish fruit
{n: guava, true guava, guava bush, Psidium guajava} small tropical American shrubby tree; widely cultivated in warm regions for its sweet globular yellow fruit
{n: guava} tropical fruit having yellow skin and pink pulp; eaten fresh or used for e.g. jellies
{n: gummosis} pathological production of gummy exudates in citrus and various stone-fruit trees
{n: hackberry, nettle tree} any of various trees of the genus Celtis having inconspicuous flowers and small berrylike fruits
{n: harpy, harpy bat, tube-nosed bat, tube-nosed fruit bat} any of various fruit bats of the genus Nyctimene distinguished by nostrils drawn out into diverging tubes
{n: heart cherry, oxheart, oxheart cherry} any of several cultivated sweet cherries having sweet juicy heart-shaped fruits
{n: hedge thorn, natal plum, Carissa bispinosa} South African shrub having forked spines and plumlike fruit; frequently used as hedging
{n: hip, rose hip, rosehip} the fruit of a rose plant
{n: hog plum, wild plum} fruit of the wild plum of southern United States
{n: hog plum, yellow mombin, yellow mombin tree, Spondias mombin} tropical American tree having edible yellow fruit
{n: hog plum, yellow mombin} yellow oval tropical fruit
{n: honeydew, honeydew melon} the fruit of a variety of winter melon vine; a large smooth greenish-white melon with pale green flesh
{n: hop hornbeam} any of several trees resembling hornbeams with fruiting clusters resembling hops
{n: horn of plenty, cornucopia} a goat's horn filled with grain and flowers and fruit symbolizing prosperity
{n: horse nettle, ball nettle, bull nettle, ball nightshade, Solanum carolinense} coarse prickly weed having pale yellow flowers and yellow berrylike fruit; common throughout southern and eastern United States
{n: horticulturist, plantsman} an expert in the science of cultivating plants (fruit or flowers or vegetables or ornamental plants)
{n: hot pepper} any of various pungent capsicum fruits
{n: hubbard squash, Cucurbita maxima} any of several winter squash plants producing large greyish-green football-shaped fruit with a rough warty rind
{n: huckleberry} any of various dark-fruited as distinguished from blue-fruited blueberries
{n: hull} dry outer covering of a fruit or seed or nut
{n: hunting and gathering tribe, hunting and gathering society} group that supports itself by hunting and fishing and be gathering wild fruits and vegetables; usually nomadic
{n: husk} outer membranous covering of some fruits or seeds
{n: ice, frappe} a frozen dessert with fruit flavoring (especially one containing no milk)
{n: ilama, ilama tree, Annona diversifolia} tropical American tree grown in southern United States having a whitish pink-tinged fruit
{n: ilama} whitish tropical fruit with a pinkish tinge related to custard apples; grown in the southern United States
{n: infructescence} the fruiting stage of the inflorescence
{n: invert sugar} a mixture of equal parts of glucose and fructose resulting from the hydrolysis of sucrose; found naturally in fruits; sweeter than glucose
{n: ivy, common ivy, English ivy, Hedera helix} Old World vine with lobed evergreen leaves and black berrylike fruits
{n: jaboticaba, jaboticaba tree, Myrciaria cauliflora} small evergreen tropical tree native to Brazil and West Indies but introduced into southern United States; grown in Brazil for its edible tough-skinned purple grapelike fruit that grows all along the branches
{n: jaboticaba} tough-skinned purple grapelike tropical fruit grown in Brazil
{n: jackfruit, jackfruit tree, Artocarpus heterophyllus} East Indian tree cultivated for its immense edible fruit and seeds
{n: jackfruit, jak, jack} immense East Indian fruit resembling breadfruit; it contains an edible pulp and nutritious seeds that are commonly roasted
{n: jam} preserve of crushed fruit
{n: jello, Jell-O} fruit-flavored dessert (trade mark Jell-O) made from a commercially prepared gelatin powder
{n: jelly fungus} any fungus of the order Tremellales or Auriculariales whose fruiting body is jellylike in consistency when fresh
{n: jelly} a preserve made of the jelled juice of fruit
{n: jimsonweed, jimson weed, Jamestown weed, common thorn apple, apple of Peru, Datura stramonium} intensely poisonous tall coarse annual tropical weed having rank-smelling foliage, large white or violet trumpet-shaped flowers and prickly fruits
{n: jointed charlock, wild radish, wild rape, runch, Raphanus raphanistrum} Eurasian weed having yellow or mauve or white flowers and podlike fruits
{n: jujube, Chinese date, Chinese jujube} dark red plumlike fruit of Old World buckthorn trees
{n: jujube, jujube bush, Christ's-thorn, Jerusalem thorn, Ziziphus jujuba} spiny tree having dark red edible fruits
{n: jujube} chewy fruit-flavored jellied candy (sometimes medicated to soothe a sore throat)
{n: juniper berry} berrylike fruit of a plant of the genus Juniperus especially the berrylike cone of the common juniper
{n: kaffir bread, Encephalartos caffer} South African cycad; the farinaceous pith of the fruit used as food
{n: kai apple} South African fruit smelling and tasting like apricots; used for pickles and preserves
{n: kangaroo apple, poroporo, Solanum aviculare} Australian annual sometimes cultivated for its racemes of purple flowers and edible yellow egg-shaped fruit
{n: kei apple, kei apple bush, Dovyalis caffra} vigorous South African spiny shrub grown for its round yellow juicy edible fruits
{n: kernel, meat} the inner and usually edible part of a seed or grain or nut or fruit stone
"black walnut kernels are difficult to get out of the shell"
{n: ketembilla, kitembilla, kitambilla, ketembilla tree, Ceylon gooseberry, Dovyalis hebecarpa} a small shrubby spiny tree cultivated for its maroon-purple fruit with sweet purple pulp tasting like gooseberries; Sri Lanka and India
{n: ketembilla, kitembilla, kitambilla} maroon-purple gooseberry-like fruit of India having tart-sweet purple pulp used especially for preserves
{n: kinkajou, honey bear, potto, Potos flavus, Potos caudivolvulus} arboreal fruit-eating mammal of tropical America with a long prehensile tail
{n: kiwi, kiwi fruit, Chinese gooseberry} fuzzy brown egg-shaped fruit with slightly tart green flesh
{n: kumquat, cumquat, kumquat tree} any of several trees or shrubs of the genus Fortunella bearing small orange-colored edible fruits with thick sweet-flavored skin and sour pulp
{n: kumquat} small oval citrus fruit with thin sweet rind and very acid pulp
{n: lactic acid} a clear odorless hygroscopic syrupy carboxylic acid found in sour milk and in many fruits
{n: lanseh, lansa, lansat, lanset} East Indian tart yellow berrylike fruit
{n: leak fungus, ring rot fungus, Rhizopus stolonifer} fungus causing soft watery rot in fruits and vegetables and rings of dry rot around roots of sweet potatoes
{n: leak} soft watery rot in fruits and vegetables caused by fungi
{n: legume} the fruit or seed of any of various bean or pea plants consisting of a case that splits along both sides when ripe and having the seeds attach to one side of the case
{n: lemon balm} lemony leaves used for a tisane or in soups or fruit punches
{n: lemon, lemon tree, Citrus limon} a small evergreen tree that originated in Asia but is widely cultivated for its fruit
{n: lemon} yellow oval fruit with juicy acidic flesh
{n: lentil} the fruit or seed of a lentil plant
{n: lepidobotrys} African tree often classified in other families; similar to the Costa Rican caracolito in wood structure as well as in fruit and flowers and leaves and seeds
{n: lime} the green acidic fruit of any of various lime trees
{n: ling, ling ko, Trapa bicornis} water chestnut whose spiny fruit has two rather than 4 prongs
{n: litchi, lichee, litchi tree, Litchi chinensis, Nephelium litchi} Chinese tree cultivated especially in Philippines and India for its edible fruit; sometimes placed in genus Nephelium
{n: litchi, litchi nut, litchee, lichi, leechee, lichee, lychee} Chinese fruit having a thin brittle shell enclosing a sweet jellylike pulp and a single seed; often dried
{n: living rock, Ariocarpus fissuratus} usually unbranched usually spineless cactus covered with warty tubercles and having magenta flowers and white or green fruit; resembles the related mescal; northeastern Mexico and southwestern United States
{n: loganberry, Rubus loganobaccus, Rubus ursinus loganobaccus} red-fruited bramble native from Oregon to Baja California
{n: longan, lungen, longanberry, Dimocarpus longan, Euphorbia litchi, Nephelium longana} tree of southeastern Asia to Australia grown primarily for its sweet edible fruit resembling litchi nuts; sometimes placed in genera Euphorbia or Nephelium
{n: longanberry, dragon's eye} Asian fruit similar to litchi
{n: loofa, loofah, luffa, loufah sponge} the dried fibrous part of the fruit of a plant of the genus Luffa; used as a washing sponge or strainer
{n: loofah, vegetable sponge, Luffa cylindrica} the loofah climber that has cylindrical fruit
{n: loquat, Japanese plum} yellow olive-sized semitropical fruit with a large free stone and relatively little flesh; used for jellies
{n: loquat, loquat tree, Japanese medlar, Japanese plum, Eriobotrya japonica} evergreen tree of warm regions having fuzzy yellow olive-sized fruit with a large free stone; native to China and Japan
{n: lory} small brightly colored Australasian parrots having a brush-tipped tongue for feeding on nectar and soft fruits
{n: luffa, dishcloth gourd, sponge gourd, rag gourd, strainer vine} any of several tropical annual climbers having large yellow flowers and edible young fruits; grown commercially for the mature fruit's dried fibrous interior that is used as a sponge
{n: lygaeid, lygaeid bug} a true bug: usually bright-colored; pest of cultivated crops and some fruit trees
{n: macedoine} mixed diced fruits or vegetables; hot or cold
{n: maleic acid} a colorless crystalline compound found in unripe fruit (such as apples or tomatoes or cherries) and used mainly to make polyester resins
{n: mamey, mammee, mammee apple} globular or ovoid tropical fruit with thick russet leathery rind and juicy yellow or reddish flesh
{n: mammee apple, mammee, mamey, mammee tree, Mammea americana} tropical American tree having edible fruit with a leathery rind
{n: mandarin, mandarin orange, mandarin orange tree, Citrus reticulata} shrub or small tree having flattened globose fruit with very sweet aromatic pulp and thin yellow-orange to flame-orange rind that is loose and easily removed; native to southeastern Asia
{n: mandrake, devil's apples, Mandragora officinarum} a plant of southern Europe and North Africa having purple flowers, yellow fruits and a forked root formerly thought to have magical powers
{n: mango, mango tree, Mangifera indica} large evergreen tropical tree cultivated for its large oval fruit
{n: mangosteen, mangosteen tree, Garcinia mangostana} East Indian tree with thick leathery leaves and edible fruit
{n: mangosteen} two- to three-inch tropical fruit with juicy flesh suggestive of both peaches and pineapples
{n: mango} large oval tropical fruit having smooth skin, juicy aromatic pulp, and a large hairy seed
{n: mangrove, Rhizophora mangle} a tropical tree or shrub bearing fruit that germinates while still on the tree and having numerous prop roots that eventually form an impenetrable mass and are important in land building
{n: marang, marang tree, Artocarpus odoratissima} Philippine tree similar to the breadfruit tree bearing edible fruit
{n: marang} tropical fruit from the Philippines having a mass of small seeds embedded in sweetish white pulp
{n: marasca, marasca cherry, maraschino cherry, Prunus cerasus marasca} Dalmatian bitter wild cherry tree bearing fruit whose juice is made into maraschino liqueur
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