tomato
It is technically a fruit
It has always been a fruit. If it has seeds it is a fruit, if it doesn't it is a vegetable. Only pumpkins are a vegetable classed by everyone but technically they are a fruit.
Yes it is technically a fruit but often cooked like a vegetable.
A tomato is technically a fruit.
It is technically a fruit (has seeds). In cooking, though, it is typically considered a vegetable.
A tomato is technically the fruit of the tomato plant, but it falls into the vegetable category of the food pyramid. So it's both!
Zucchini is technically a fruit because it develops from the flower of the zucchini plant and contains seeds. However, it is commonly referred to and cooked as a vegetable.
Cantelope is a melon, like a watermelon which is a fruit, so technically, cantaloupe is a fruit.
Quinoa is a grain-like crop. Its seeds are consumed as a food. So, technically people eat a part (seed) of a fruit.
Technically, it would be classified as a fruit because it bears seeds.
A cucumber is botanically a fruit, but usually is regarded as a "culinary vegetable". (Tomatoes are another example of something that's technically a fruit, botanically speaking, but is used as a vegetable in cooking.)
No. Tomato is commonly known as a vegetable crop, even though it is technically a fruit.