- Dame Mary to hide in conversation - Fruit after “straw” or “blue” - Fruit from Holly for Halle - Fruit type - Small fruit - Small soft fruit - Soft fruit
- Muffin fruit - Small soft fruit - Small, sweet, blue black berry - The berry of several species of Vaccinium, an ericaceous
genus, differing from the American huckleberries in containing numerous
minute seeds instead of ten nutlets. The commonest species are V.
Pennsylvanicum and V. vacillans. V. corymbosum is the tall blueberry.
- A stone fruit - Capri to somehow produce fruit - Fruit - Fruit type - Organise a trip with company to get fruit - Rip coat to pieces to find fruit - Round fruit
- Fruit - prickly shrub with red berries - Red fruit - Soft fruit - Summer fruit - The thimble-shaped fruit of the Rubus Idaeus and other
similar brambles; as, the black, the red, and the white raspberry. - The shrub bearing this fruit.
- Bachelor joins grandma for fruit - Ban an African leader’s fruit - Cliché treat for a monkey - Cuban analyst uses crop that can be split - Cuban analyst uses republic crop that can be split - Curved fruit - Dessert, ... split
- Bramble - Soft fruit - The fruit of several species of bramble (Rubus); also,
the plant itself. Rubus fruticosus is the blackberry of England; R.
villosus and R. Canadensis are the high blackberry and low blackberry
of the United States. There are also other kinds.
- Dark-red berry - Red fruit - Soft fruit - A fragrant edible berry, of a delicious taste and
commonly of a red color, the fruit of a plant of the genus Fragaria, of
which there are many varieties. Also, the plant bearing the fruit. The
common American strawberry is Fragaria virginiana; the European, F.
vesca. There are also other less common species.
- Red acidic fruit - Red stone fruits - Small red fruit - Tiny red fruit, served with turkey - Xmas sauce fruit - A red, acid berry, much used for making sauce, etc.;
also, the plant producing it (several species of Vaccinum or
Oxycoccus.) The high cranberry or cranberry tree is a species of
Viburnum (V. Opulus), and the other is sometimes called low cranberry
or marsh cranberry to distinguish it.