tomato, cherry, dragonfruit, orange, apple and etc
No, a tomato is an edible fruit.No according to Google it is definitely a fruit!
scientifically, no! the word vegitable mean an edible plant, including fruit. such as an eggplant. it is not a fruit, but it also not a vegitable
Juice is the liquid that can be squeezed from edible fruit to drink.
Dewberry is a small sweet edible fruit. They are purple to black.
The key differences between vegetables and fruit are that vegetables are typically the edible parts of plants like roots, stems, or leaves, while fruit is the mature ovary of a flowering plant that contains seeds. Vegetables are usually savory and can be eaten raw or cooked, while fruit is often sweet and is eaten raw as a snack or dessert.
No, tobacco fruit is not edible.
It is a simple fruit; a fruit that develops from a single ovary in a single flower. A fruit is the edible reproductive body of a plant and contains a seed (or stone) or multiple seeds. Berries are simple fruits. Not all fruits are sweet and many are mistaken for vegetables because of that. Avocados and tomatoes are two examples of non sweet fruits.
There is no such fruit where its peel (Exocarp) is only edible.
They grow on small olive trees. Anything edible such as apples, pears, nuts (a hard-shelled fruit) that contain seeds or a pit is a fruit.
We tend to say that fruits are sweet and vegetables are not. This is facile but serves it's purpose in everyday life. A fruit develops from a fertilised flower, vegetables can be rhizomes,tap roots ,tubers and edible stems. Rhubarb is a good example of the opposite problem, a vegetable classed as a fruit.
fruit peels vegetables peel paper glass
Fruits and vegetables do not typically produce spores; instead, they reproduce through seeds. However, certain fungi, like mushrooms, which are often classified as vegetables in culinary contexts, reproduce via spores. Edible fungi, such as shiitake or portobello mushrooms, are examples of spore-producing organisms. In contrast, traditional fruits and vegetables, like apples or carrots, rely on seeds for reproduction.