Define:Fruit
Appearance
Scots
[eedit soorce]Noun
[eedit soorce]fruit
Inglis
[eedit soorce]Pronunciation
[eedit soorce]- (Received Pronunciation, US) enPR: fro͞ot, /fɹuːt/
- Audio (US) (help·info)
- Audio (UK) (help·info)
- (deprecatit uise o
|lang=
parameter) Rhymes: -uːt
Noun
[eedit soorce]Fruit (countable and uncountable, plural Fruits)
- fruit
- An end result, effect, or consequence; advantageous or disadvantageous result.
- (colloquial, derogatory) A homosexual or effeminate man.
Verb
[eedit soorce]Fruit (third-person singular simple present Fruits, present participle Fruiting, simple past an past participle Fruited)
- Tae produce fruit, seeds, or spores.
- 1910, Canada Experimental Farms Service, Report of the Dominion Experimental Farms:
- It may be said, however, that the percentage of green apples among the Fameuse seedlings is much less than among the others as out of 33 Fameuse seedlings which had fruited up to this year, none was green and we recollect but one light coloured Fameuse seedling fruiting this year.
- 1998, Randy Molina & David Pilz, Managing Forest Ecosystems to Conserve Fungus Diversity and Sustain Wild Mushroom Harvests, ISBN 0788143433, page 10:
- For example, chanterelles and russulas can start fruiting in early to mid summer given sufficient moisture, but other species, such as matsutake, rarely fruit until temperatures cool in the autumn, even if moisture is available earlier.
- 2014, David Mitchell, The Bone Clocks, ISBN 9780340921609, page 12:
- The grass and weeds come up to my waist and the plum trees are already fruiting up, though most of the fruit'll go to the wasps and the worms, Vinny says, 'cause he can't be arsed to pick it.
- 1910, Canada Experimental Farms Service, Report of the Dominion Experimental Farms:
Catalan
[eedit soorce]Etymology
[eedit soorce]Frae Old Provençal [Term?], frae Laitin fructus.
Noun
[eedit soorce]Dutch
[eedit soorce]Pronunciation
[eedit soorce]- (deprecatit uise o
|lang=
parameter) Rhymes: -œy̯t - /frœy̯t/
- audio (help·info)
Etymology
[eedit soorce]Frae Middle Dutch fruut, froyt, frae Auld French fruit.
Noun
[eedit soorce]Fruit n (uncountable)
- fruit (produced bi trees or busses, or ony sweet vegetable)
Synonyms
[eedit soorce]Derived terms
[eedit soorce]French
[eedit soorce]Etymology
[eedit soorce]Frae Middle French fruict, alteration o Auld French fruit, frae Laitin fructus (“enjoyment, proceeds, profits, produce, income”), a derivative o fruor (“hae the benefit o, tae uise, tae enjoy”), frae Proto-Indo-European *bhrug- (“tae mak uise o, tae hae enjoyment o”).
Pronunciation
[eedit soorce]- IPA(key): /fʁɥi/
- Audio (Western France) (help·info)
- Template:Homophones
Noun
[eedit soorce]Fruit m (plural Fruits)
Derived terms
[eedit soorce]Further reading
[eedit soorce]- “Fruit” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Auld French
[eedit soorce]Etymology
[eedit soorce]Pronunciation
[eedit soorce]- /frɥit/
Noun
[eedit soorce]- fruit
- circa 1170, Christian of Troyes, Érec et Énide
- Oisiaus et veneison et fruit
- bird, venison an fruits
- circa 1170, Christian of Troyes, Érec et Énide