Meaning Berry
What does Berry mean? Here you find 25 meanings of the word Berry. You can also add a definition of Berry yourself

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Berry


This term has two meanings. An individual grape is called a berry by grapegrowers. It also describes the set of fruit flavors found in many wines, which includes strawberry, raspberry, blueberry, etc.
Source: winespectator.com

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Berry


Old English berie, from Proto-Germanic *basjom (source also of Old Norse ber, Middle Dutch bere, German Beere "berry;" Old Saxon winber, Gothic weinabasi "grape"), which is of unkn [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Berry


simple fruit that has no stone, but many seeds in a fleshy pulp.
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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Berry


Small, juicy fruits covered in thin flesh. Not all edible
Source: gsproducts.co.uk

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Berry


 The botanical definition of a berry is a fleshy fruit produced from a single flower and containing one ovary. Grapes and avocados are two common examples. The berry is the most common type of fleshy fruit in which the entire ovary wall ripens into an edible pericarp. They may have one or more carpels. The seeds are usually embedded in the fleshy i [..]
Source: beebetter.info (offline)

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Berry


An individual fruit on a grape cluster.
Source: sjmastergardeners.ucanr.edu

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Berry


Fleshy fruit, with succulent pericarp, as in Vitis.
Source: virtualherbarium.org

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Berry


The fleshy fruit of cane fruits, bush fruits, and strawberries.
Source: atlantishydroponics.com (offline)

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Berry


Pulpy fruit that does not split open.
Source: southerngardening.org

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Berry


Technically, this is a seed or seeds enclosed in a juicy pulp (e.g., tomato). Just to confuse the issue, the fruits we call berries (raspberries, blackberries and the like) are correctly known as drupes, but by regular usage the term ‘berry’ has become applied to many soft fruits that are botanically not berries at all.
Source: blog.bakker.co.uk (offline)

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Berry


any of numerous small and pulpy edible fruits; used as desserts or in making jams and jellies and preserves pick or gather berries; "We went berrying in the summer" a small f [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Berry


any small round juicy fruit without a stone
Source: eenglish.in

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Berry


A fleshy, two- or multiple-carpeled ovary, each carpel having many seeds. best available, economically achievable technology (BAT)
Source: mhhe.com (offline)

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Berry


a fleshy or pulpy indehiscent fruit with 1 or more seeds, the seeds embedded in the fleshy tissue of the pericarp; may be formed from either a superior or an inferior ovary. Fig. 18 D & E.
Source: plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au

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Berry


fleshy fruit with several seeds.
Source: forestry.usu.edu (offline)

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Berry


[Fruit type]/[Indehiscent] -- Fleshy fruit with (1-) several seeds immersed in soft flesh, but seeds without a stony outer layer, e.g. tomato (see drupe).
Source: kew.org

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Berry


(n) any of numerous small and pulpy edible fruits; used as desserts or in making jams and jellies and preserves(n) a small fruit having any of various structures, e.g., simple (grape or blueberry) or [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Berry


A fleshy fruit with one to many seeds. Biennial A plant that completes its life cycle and dies in two years. Flower and fruit production usually occurs in the second year.
Source: frankstehno.com (offline)

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Berry


very
Source: gullahtours.com

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Berry


A Cambridge mathematician who dabbled briefly in economics, Berry was born on 28 May 1862 in Croydon and died on 15 August 1929 in Cambridge. ...
Source: dictionaryofeconomics.com

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Berry


Berry is another term for grape.
Source: thewinecellarinsider.com

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Berry


Berries are versatile items that can be used by Trainers to affect or protect a Pokémon's HP or status, or they can be consumed by Pokémon automatically during battle. Unlike ordinary item use, a [..]
Source: pokemon.com

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Berry


The fleshy fruit of cane fruits, bush fruits, and strawberries.
Source: growershouse.com

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Berry


Variant of Barry.
Source: behindthename.com

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Berry


From the English word referring to the small fruit. It is ultimately derived from Old English berie. This name has only been in use since the 20th century.
Source: behindthename.com





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