Fresh and ripe are the adjectives describing the noun grapes.
No, it is a noun (a fruit). Used with other nouns (grape juice, grape flavor), it is a noun adjunct rather than an adjective.
Some creative recipes that incorporate fresh grape leaves include stuffed grape leaves with rice and herbs, grape leaf-wrapped fish or meat, and grape leaf pesto.
There was a grape under the table. The grape was rotten.
How much yeast do you need to add for 20 gallons of fresh grape must?
"Please water my plants or I cut you off at ankles" - spoken in a Russian mafia leader accent I would like you to water my plants whilst I am on a holiday. You would be a gem if you water my roses every second day. The rest of them only need to be watered every fourth day.
the density
a grape or tomato
Salt water is much denser than fresh water and therefore can provide a much greater buoyant force.
A raisin is just a shriveled grape.
When you say "a" in a sentence it always has to be before a Constantin. On the other hand when you say "an" that will be before a vowel. For example: She wanted a apple. She wanted an apple. OR: She wanted a grape. She wanted an grape.
She had intended to do some good grape-stomping, but instead her foot slipped and she fell out of the barrel and hurt herself, thus accomplishing very little grape-stomping.
banana strawberry apple grape mango grapefruit orange