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  1. Squash (fruit) (4665 bytes)
    22: ...he summer, while the skin is still tender and the fruit relatively small. They are consumed almost imm...
    24: ...m ''winter squash'' is used here to differentiate from ''summer squash,'' it is also commonly used to ...
    28: Besides the fruits, squash seeds, blossoms, and tendrils are als...
    36: ...rcup and Mooregold. On this species the peduncle (fruit stem) is spongy and swollen, not ridged.
    45: ...hes DSC01081.jpg|left|thumb|Squashes grow hanging from a network of stalks]]
  2. Fruit (8416 bytes)
    1: ...sh-strawberries-in-a-bucket.jpg|thumb|right|550px|Fresh strawberries in a bucket]]
    2: ...arrot]] is defined as a fruit, presumably because fruits are taxed at a higher [[duty]] and [[carrot j...
    4: ...[[yew]], have fleshy [[Aril|aril]]s that resemble fruits and some [[juniper]]s have ''berry-like'', fl...
    6: ...ruits are seedless. A plant that does not produce fruit is known as '''''acarpous''''', meaning essent...
    8: == Fruit development ==

Page text matches

  1. Grapefruit (4275 bytes)
    1: ...{Taxobox_begin | color = lightgreen | name = Grapefruit}}
    2: ...sket of grapefruit]] | caption = A basket of grapefruit}}
    16: ...n for its [[fruit]], which are also known as grapefruit.
    18: ...ions in [[Florida]] and [[Texas]]. In Spanish the fruit is known as the ''toronja''.
    20: ...o]] (''Citrus grandis'') with the sweet [[orange (fruit)|orange]] (''Citrus sinensis''), though it is ...
  2. Christopher Columbus (44177 bytes)
    1: ...ns claim he could have been born in other places, from the [[Aragonese_Empire|Crown of Aragó]] to the...
    5: ...is one thing that sets off Columbus' first voyage from all of these: less than two decades later, the ...
    29: ... Atlantic Ocean. The fleet came under attack by [[French privateers]] off the [[Cape of St. Vincent]],...
    31: ...and]], [[Madeira]], [[Azores|the Azores]], and [[Africa]]. Columbus's brother Bartolomeo worked as a ...
    33: ... to purchase sugar, and along the coasts of West Africa between [[1482]] and [[1485]], reaching the Po...
  3. Ionic order (6526 bytes)
    6: ... [[Greek Revival]], it conveyed an air of archaic freshness and primitive, perhaps even republican, vi...
    8: ...wers may swing from the clefts of the volutes, or from their "eyes". After a little early experimentat...
    12: ...the proportions of the architrave, which made the frieze more prominent.
    14: ...ary" approach, it must be in traditions passed on from [[Hellenistic]] architects, such as [[Hermogene...
  4. Clip art (7441 bytes)
    2: * Thousands of [https://classroomclipart.com Free Clipart]
    37: ...sroomclipart.com/image/category/fruit-clipart.htm Fruit Clipart]
    78: ...documents with limited distribution to use images from non-public-domain sources for which they have n...
  5. Reproduction (2286 bytes)
    6: ...n are [[binary fission]], [[fragmentation Biology|fragmentation]] and [[spore formation]].
    10: ...ears) produces 50, and a [[Drosophila melanogster|fruit fly]] (10–14 days) produces up to 900. B...
  6. Nathalie Sarraute (1197 bytes)
    2: ...1999]] in [[Paris, France]], was a lawyer and a [[Francophone]] writer of [[Russia]]n origin.
    4: ...ar [[Moscow]], and passed her childhood between [[France]] and [[Russia]]. In [[1909]], her family mov...
    13: * ''The Golden Fruit'', [[1963]]
  7. Billie Holiday (6766 bytes)
    9: ...own for money by threatening to tell his then-girlfriend that Holiday was his daughter.
    20: ...k entrance and forced to wait in a dark room away from the audience before appearing on stage. Once be...
    24: ...duced Holiday to the drug, but there is consensus from historians and contemporaneous sources that she...
    30: ...d [[Lester Young]]; both were less than two years from death.
    34: ...s well [http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/strangefruit/].
  8. Adam and Eve (8913 bytes)
    2: ...ate, '''Eve''' (or '''Hawa''') was either created from his [[rib]] (Genesis 2.21-22), or created at th...
    15: ... Garden of Eden to cultivate it, and to enjoy its fruits under this one prohibition: "Of the tree of t...
    17: ...r tradition made into Satan) to eat the forbidden fruit of the knowledge of good and evil, for "the se...
    20: ...[[Jesus]] was born, the flaming sword was removed from the Garden of Eden, making it possible for [[hu...
    36: ...e of a notion that it was caused by the forbidden fruit sticking in the throat of Adam.
  9. Joan of Arc (27453 bytes)
    2: ...[16th century]], embraced as a cultural symbol in French patriotic circles since the [[19th century]],...
    4: ...ponsible for a revitalization of [[Charles VII of France|Charles VII]]'s faction during the [[Hundred ...
    7: ...[[Duke of Orl顮s]] and later of [[Charles VII of France|Charles VII]]). The groups were involved in a...
    11: ...876]]) depicts Joan's awe upon receiving a vision from the [[archangel]] [[Michael (archangel)|Michael...
    16: ...May 7]], the remaining English forces were pulled from their [[siege]] lines on [[May 8]]. The lifting...
  10. Columbine (2097 bytes)
    9: ...in five sepals, five petals and five pistils. The fruit is a follicle that holds many seeds and is for...
  11. Orchidaceae (20056 bytes)
    16: ... language|Greek]] ''orchis'', meaning 'testicle', from the appearance of subterranean tuberoids in som...
    23: ...restrial]] [[plant]]s, retrieving their nutrients from the soil. This group includes all [[Europe]]an ...
    40: ...ctive mottle of the leaves of [[Lady's Slipper]]s from temperate zones (''[[Paphiopedilum]]'') is caus...
    47: ..."one-footed") growth. The new shoots grow upwards from a single stem, originating in the end bud of th...
    48: ...the rhizome may start its growth again, this time from an 'eye', or undeveloped bud, thereby causing t...
  12. Sunflower (5784 bytes)
    18: ... early in the [[16th century]]. ''Helianthus'' is from the [[Greek language|Greek]] for "sunflower".
    23: ...hat we commonly call the seeds are actually the [[fruit]] (an ''[[achene]]'') of the plant, with the t...
    29: ..., and when the blooming stage is reached the stem freezes in its eastward direction. Thus, blooming su...
    34: ...s, because they reduce [[bird]] damage and losses from some [[phytopathology|plant disease]]s. There ...
    40: Scientific literature reports, from [[1567]], that a 12 m (40'), traditional, singl...
  13. Begonia (2934 bytes)
    15: ...wo to four branched or twisted [[stigma]]s. The [[fruit]] is a winged capsule containing numerous minu...
    17: The genus is named after [[Michel Begon]], a French patron of [[botany]].
    21: ...nts should be stored in a dry place secure from [[frost]]; they are increased by late summer and autum...
  14. Apple (20408 bytes)
    16: ...]], and is one of the most widely cultivated tree fruits. Table apples are of the species ''M. domesti...
    27: ...ples, picked in late autumn and stored just above freezing have been an important food in [[Asia]] and...
    32: ... allow [[pesticide]]s to penetrate the top of the fruit), and popular flavor.
    34: ...around the world to preserve such local heirlooms from extinction.
    39: ...e]]s are typically too tart and astringent to eat fresh, but they give the beverage a rich flavor that...
  15. Raspberry (2847 bytes)
    15: ...ackberries-blueberries-photo.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Fresh raspberry blackberries blueberries photo ]]
    17: ...ue [[berry]]) in late summer or early autumn. The fruit is similar to that of the [[blackberry]], but ...
    19: ... second-year canes. Raspberries can be cultivated from [[USDA plant hardiness zone]]s 9 to 3.
    28: <center>[[Food]] &nbsp;|&nbsp; [[List of fruits]] &nbsp;|&nbsp; [[List of vegetables]]</cente...
    33: [[Category:Fruit]]
  16. Camellia (2759 bytes)
    13: ...ber of species considered distinct, with anything from 100&ndash;250 species being accepted.
    16: ... pink and red, and yellow in a few species. The [[fruit]] is a dry capsule subdivided into 1&ndash;5 c...
    21: ...rcial importance for '''[[tea]]''', which is made from its leaves.
    24: ...irst flowers to appear in the late winter. Late [[frost]]s can damage the flowers.
  17. Cherry (2620 bytes)
    4: ...ral, from the [[Old Norman French]] word, in turn from Latin ''cerasum'')
    5: is both a [[tree]] and its fleshy [[fruit]], a type known as a [[drupe]] with a single h...
    7: ...[Asia]], with major commercial orchards extending from [[Iberia]] east to [[Asia Minor]]; they are als...
    9: ...ngton]] supply mainly sweet cherries intended for fresh use. Major sweet cherry varieties include the ...
    12: ..."double" flowers), so are sterile and do not bear fruit. They are grown purely for their [[blossom]] a...
  18. Maple (3638 bytes)
    14: ...me 'acer' derives from the Latin "acris" (sharp), from the hardness of the wood, used for lances in th...
  19. Potentilla (2224 bytes)
    17: ...e fingers of a hand), whence the name cinquefoil (French, ''cinque feuilles'', "five leaves"), though ...
    19: ...ing from the strawberries in having dry, inedible fruit (hence the name "barren strawberry" for some s...
    23: ...ted in the genus ''[[Dasiphora]]'' as ''Dasiphora fruticosa''. Another species previously treated as '...
  20. Rose (15436 bytes)
    21: ...oses, all from the northern hemisphere and mostly from temperate regions. The species form a group of ...
    27: ...chest sources of any plant. The hips are eaten by fruit-eating [[bird]]s such as [[Thrush (bird)|thrus...
    29: ...]). Despite the presence of the thorns, roses are frequently heavily browsed by [[deer]]. A few specie...
    33: The name originates from [[Persian language|Persian]] *''vrda''- via Gre...
    42: *''[[Rosa gallica]]'' - Gallic Rose, French Rose

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