A raisin is a grape that has been dried. In the process, the grape shrivels up and becomes smaller.
In French, "grape" is masculine and would be "raisin" and the article used would be "le raisin."
Yes. The English word 'raisin' comes from the French words 'raisin sec' - 'dry grape', because that's how grapes were generally imported into England, as what we now call raisins. The 'sec' got lost over the centuries.
You cannot grow a raisin. A raisin is a dried/shriveled up grape.
Not really. A raisin is a dried-up grape. A GRAPE is a fruit.
Raisins
no
Raisins secs. Raisin, of course, means grape, and raisins are dried grapes.raisins secs
No, the skin of the raisin is the grape skin.
It takes about 28 days for a grape to turn into a raisin if you keep it in the sun long enough.
A sweet grape dried either in the sun or by artificial means.
The scientific name for raisin is Vitis vinifera, which is the common grape vine species that produces grapes. Raisins are dried grapes that can come from a variety of grape cultivars within this species.
A raisin is a dried up grape, if it is placed in water it will absorb water and regain some of its original shape and size. The process involved is called osmosis. It happens when areas of high concentration (the sugar solution inside the raisins) is separated from an area of low concentration (the water outside the grape). Physical forces try to balance the concentrations so the water passes through the grape skin (technically a semipermeable membrane) into the grape and plumps it up.