Malum.
An apple leaf midge is a creature which is a pest to apple trees, Latin name Dasineura mali.
Stipes would refer to a stem of an apple, etc...
An apple worm is a larva belonging to the codling moth, Latin name Cydia pomonella.
A seeded apple is an apple with the seeds removed. It also means pomegranate coming from the latin words, ponum (apple) and granatum (seeded).
Depends on if they are in season and on which country.
malum Persicum is Latin for Persian apple, which is what they called a peach
An alligator apple is a tropical fruit tree, Latin name Annona glabra, found growing in swamps, or the fruit of the tree.
An apple pear is a variety of northeast Asian species of pear with a crisp juicy texture, or the tree from which it comes, Latin name Pyrus pyrifolia.
An apple midge is a midge whose larvae cause damage to apples, especially a small dipterous insect, Latin name Lycoriella ingenua.
Because Adam and Eve ate the apple and thereby got kicked out of paradise because they weren't "good" any longer.
Yes, Malic acid was first isolated from apple juice by Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1785. Antoine Lavoisier in 1787 proposed the name acide malique which is derived from the latin word for apple.