5 6
Yes, as long as you cut the bruised bits off and just use the healthy parts of the apple.
No, the word 'bruised' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to bruise. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:The girl was crying because she had bruised her knee on a rock. (verb)The bruised apples were in a box for half price. (adjective)The word 'bruise' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'bruise' is a word for a mark that develops from something hitting flesh.
One apple that is bad can have mold or other infectious things that spread to the other apples in a basket. If no apples are bad then they´can keep for a very long time (months) as long as their skins are undamaged and they are kept cool. A spoiled or bruised apple starts to generate ethylene gas. This starts the process in the other apples around it.
There is an expression "like comparing apples to oranges," which is used of false comparisons and inaccurate analogies. "Apples to apples" comparison would mean comparing things that really are similar.
bruised has one syllable.
something that takes care of apples
Bruised is not a term used to describe diamonds.
of Day. Also adj.; as, dried apples., of Dry
Dancer with Bruised Knees was created in 1977.
Bruised Orange was created on -19-03-01.
Bruised Water was created on 2008-08-25.