Fruit
Yes it is. As a drupe is a plant that has fleshy fruit surrounding a stone that covers a seed. This description exactly fits the almond.
The calamansi is a fleshy citrus fruit which is categorized as a simple fruit.[1] Simple fruits can be either dry or fleshy, and result from the ripening of a simple or compound ovary in a flower with only one pistil.[2] The calamansi fruit looks like a lemon, lime or orange, has sections and each section has a seed.
My stomach and buttocks because they are fat (fleshy) and round (plump)
The parent leaf supports the development of the tiny shoot buds.
Fruit
The fleshy pulp around some seeds inhibits the seed from sprouting prematurely. When the pulp is removed by rotting or chemical application, the seed will sprout.
Stone, pit, or seed
I think its the hard part, not the fleshy part whicch is only to attract animals which then digest and disperse the seed.
Botanically, many grains and grasses are considered a fruit - as they are seed bearing.
They are fruit as they are a fleshy seed-bearing body that develops from a flower.
Yes it is. As a drupe is a plant that has fleshy fruit surrounding a stone that covers a seed. This description exactly fits the almond.
The pericarp is another name for the fleshy edible portion of the fruit. By having an edible pericarp, the seeds are carried farther abroad, often in the digestive tract of the animal that consumed the fruit.
Different types of fruit, such as apples, pears and quinces. These fruit have a number of seed chambers surrounded by a large fleshy part.
Are you going for "aril"? The seeds of the pomegranate are arils. A Guess. Fruit?
The fleshy part of the seed is called the cotyledon. This is the part of the plant where food is stored. Some seeds have one cotyledon, for example corn, and other have two cotyledons, for example a lima bean.
Mangoes have a thick, fleshy skin and hard shelled seed.