Pineapple, mulberry, fig.
What do you mean by 'multiple fruit'? Many plants have multiple fruit.
The fruit that forms from many flowers and has its individual fruits fused together is called a "multiple fruit." An example of a multiple fruit is a pineapple, which develops from a cluster of flowers (inflorescence) that produce individual berries that merge into one single fruit. Other examples include figs and mulberries.
No, okra is not an example of multiple fruit. Okra, also known as lady's finger, is a type of vegetable that develops from a single flower and contains many seeds within its pod. Multiple fruits, on the other hand, form from the ovaries of multiple flowers that cluster together, such as pineapples or figs.
An example of a multiple fruit would be the pineapple. The pineapple grows in tropical regions where it is warm most or all of the year. The pineapple is a single fruit that comes from more than one flower(and therefor more than one pistil) and the ovaries of each flower fuses so produce the large fruit.
Simple multiple fruit is different from simple aggregate fruit in the sense that simple multiple fruits are produced by a cluster of flowers whereas aggregate fruit are developed by flowers that have more than one pistil.
Aggregate fruits form from single flowers that have multiple carpels which are not joined together, i.e. each pistil contains one carpel. Compound fruits are combination of aggregate fruit and Multiple fruit. Multiple fruit is fruits of separate flowers, merged or packed closely together.
A different conditional statement, also known as a "switch" statement, allows for multiple conditions to be evaluated without the need for multiple if statements. Its syntax typically includes a variable to evaluate, followed by case clauses and a default case. Here’s an example in JavaScript: let fruit = "apple"; switch (fruit) { case "banana": console.log("It's a banana."); break; case "apple": console.log("It's an apple."); break; default: console.log("Unknown fruit."); } In this example, the output will be "It's an apple." since the variable fruit matches the second case.
multiple, berry
Examples of a simple multi-ovule fuit: apples, pears. NOT peaches or cherries.[1] simple fruit: formed from a single ovary and may contain one to many seeds.[2] multiple ovule: two or more compartments where seeds are kept.
A fruit fly.
No, bananas can produce fruit multiple times throughout their lifespan.
a fruit is an object that is edible and juicy and it is healthy...