A group of apples is commonly referred to as a "bushel" or a "barrel." In more casual terms, you might simply call it a "basket" of apples. The specific term can vary based on context, such as in agriculture or sales.
The apple is in the fuirt group.
Apples are fruits
No, the Black Apples are a musical group. There are no black apples.
A bushel.
The foreman tab and apple choir
The foremen tab and apple choir.
Oh that is an easy one! The foremen tab and apple choir!
You could humorously refer to that group as the "Tab Crab Choir." This playful name captures their activity of singing while enjoying tab cola and crab apples, combining the elements of their gathering into a catchy title.
Imagine you have apples that you have put into groups, with each group having 5 apples in it. If you take one group, you have 5 apples. This is the same as 5 x 1. 5 is how many apples per group you have. 1 is how many groups you take. If you take two groups of apples, you have 10 apples. This is the same as 5 x 2. Now consider if you don't take any groups of apples. How many apples would you have? You wouldn't have any. This is the same as 5 x 0.
An orchard.
The answer to that riddle is "a crabapple chorus." The play on words combines "crab apples" (a type of fruit) with "chorus" for a group of singers, creating a humorous image of factory foremen enjoying their drinks and snacks while singing.
There are probably recipes that call for both apple sauce and apples.