Starfruit, one of the names for the fruit of the carambola tree.
Also, grapefruit and durian (while technically pluralized with an -s) are often pluralized in common usage without one.
eye :)
Pie = Fruit filled desert. Pie ryhymes with eye. Eye spelled backwards is eye.
They are homographs.
Yes, they are spelled the same
YouTube is spelled the same in French.The website is spelled the same way as in English.
No. It is a synonym, sort of. "Produce" can mean both, or either, fruits or vegetables. A synonym is a word that has the same meaning as another word but sounds and is spelled completely differently. A homonym is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a completely different meaning. It may or may not be spelled the same way. As an aside, I cannot really think of a homonym, in the English language, for fruit.
No. Jelly has a TON of sugar in it, jam has more fruit than jelly. You can often find more fruit chunks in jam. Jelly does not have fruit chunks in it.
Jalapenos are neither fruits or vegetables many say they are peppers but the are just the same as pineapples
A homonym can be two or more words that are spelled the same but have different meanings, such as lead (to be in charge of a group) and lead (a chemical element). A homonym can also be two or more words that are pronounced the same but are spelled differently, such as to, too, and two.
"Kyrstin" is spelled the same in French as it is in English.
Because they author decided it was more unique. She didn't want her vampire to be spelled the same. Same as if you read a book and it says magick instead of magic.
* You must look for juices made not from extracts, but from the real fruit. Juices are nutritious; they conserve many of the properties of fresh fruit. * You would do much better to eat fruit than to drink fruit juice; you would have to drink a lot more juice to get the same nutritional value of one piece of fruit. And, of course, you would be consuming a lot more unnecessary calories. Fresh fruit all the way!