Fleshy fruit with hard inner layer (endocarp or stone) surrounding the seed.
Sinônimos
Examples for "stone fruit"
Examples for "stone fruit"
1Sharp acidity followed by lovely richness of stone fruit on the pallet.
2The hail made a much bigger dent in the stone fruit crop.
3The flat coastal land was ideal for growing feijoas, stone fruit and berries.
4Lovely fresh acidity with stone fruit and a spicy follow through.
5It should mean lots of good-flavoured stone fruit that store well.
1The fruit is a drupe, containing a large blackish flatted seed.
2Background: A complete and hardened endocarp is a typical trait of drupe fruits.
3The fruit is a hard, woody drupe, containing small seeds.
4Its leaves are shaped like spear-heads; the fruit is a kind of drupe, clothed in fleshy scales.
5The fruit is a small fleshy drupe.
6The whole tree is usually covered with a scaly tomentum, while the fruit is a black flattened drupe.
7Laet calls the tree totocke, and mentions the drupe of the size of the human head, which contains the almonds.
8These village rispetti bear the same relation to the canzoniere of Petrarch as the 'savage drupe' to the 'suave plum.'
9The fruit is a drupe, having a downy outer coat, called the epicarp, which encloses the reticulated hard stony shell or endocarp.
10She smiled and allowed the back of her left index finger stroke the curve of the drupe before plucking it from its place.
11The Umirí berry (Humirium floribundum) is a black drupe similar in appearance to the Damascene plum, and not greatly unlike it in taste.
12The almond fruit is a drupe, like the peach, but the flesh is thin and hard and the pit is the "almond" of commerce.
13However, standing beside Macsen was Doblek, master of Drupe.
14Column 4: Average Number of good Seeds per Drupe in all the Drupes during the two Seasons.
15These drupes adhere together, forming round or conical caps, which will drop from the receptacle when over-ripe.
16Still, to think that the monocotyledons evolved the familiar drupes, or stone fruits, on a parallel line to the dicotyledons is-amazing!