fruited
English
Etymology
From fruit + -ed.
Verb
fruited
- simple past tense and past participle of fruit
Adjective
fruited (comparative more fruited, superlative most fruited)
- Containing fruit; bearing fruit.
- 1895, Katherine Lee Bates, America the Beautiful (song):
- O beautiful for spacious skies, for amber wafes of grain, for purple mountain majesties above the fruited plain!
- 1907, Barbara Baynton, Sally Krimmer; Alan Lawson, editors, Human Toll (Portable Australian Authors: Barbara Baynton), St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, published 1980, page 213:
- Jim, importuned, had come with his axe and at her wish had felled it with the fruited but unripe mistletoe.
- 2004, Tricia Laning, New Cook Book, →ISBN, page 89:
- Sea Bass With Fruited Tomatillo Salsa
- 2011, Chittaranjan Kole, Wild Crop Relatives: Genomic and Breeding Resources: Temperate Fruits., →ISBN, page 147:
- Kikuchi (1946) classified Pyrus species into three groups, small fruited species with two carpels, large fruited species with five carpels, and their hybrids with 3-4 carpels.
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