A fruit is the ripened ovary or ovaries of a flowering plant, potentially along with some other related tissues. Technically the ovary doesn't have to be part of the flower, but in practice, it pretty much always is; the whole point of flowers is to direct pollinating insects to it so that they can pick up pollen from one flower and deposit it in the ovary of another flower. If the ovary weren't in the flower, then there would be no point in having the flower at all.
So the fruit of a flower is called a "fruit".
There are various kinds of fruits: berries, aggregate fruits, accessory fruits, pomes, drupes ... but they're all fruits.
Blossoms
Dragon
Pollen tube.
The ovary of the flower develops into a fruit.
The fruit is the ripened ovary of a flower.
In most plants, this would be the flower; specifically, the petals.
Bananas are simple fruit, or sometimes called epigenous berries. When formed, the fruit includes tissue derived from parts of the flower besides the ovary. Aggregate fruit include seeds from different ovaries of a single flower, such as blackberries.
The bracts (leaf like growths) from the stalk over a flower bud are called sepals. They are still called this right through the process to the final fruit. If you look at the stalk of a tomato you can often see the remains of the sepal where the stalk joins the fruit (a tomato is actually a fruit).
Saffron is called Vegetable Gold. It is actually a purple flower.
It is called as Flower Bud or you can also call as Bud.
Once the flower has been polinated, it eventually turns into a fruit. This happens in the female part of the flower.
Seeds are made at the flower. Fruit is generated at the flower. Fruit contains seeds.
The flower is pollinated and the fruit develops to produce the seed.
The Ovary of the flower becomes the fruit after fertilization by pollen