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  2. Cut flowers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut_flowers

    Plants used for cut flowers and cut greens are derived from many plant species and diverse plant families. Cut flower arrangements can include cut stems from annual plants, flower bulbs or herbaceous perennials, cut stems of evergreens or colored leaves, flowers from landscape shrubs, flowers that have been dried or preserved, fruit on tree branches, dried uniquely shaped fruit or stems from ...

  3. Averrhoa carambola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Averrhoa_carambola

    Averrhoa carambola is a species of tree in the family Oxalidaceae native to tropical Southeast Asia; [1] it has a number of common names, including carambola, star fruit and five-corner. [2] It is a small tree or shrub that grows 5 to 12 m (16 to 39 ft) tall, with rose to red-purple flowers.

  4. Golden Star (carambola) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Star_(carambola)

    Golden Star is a carambola (Averrhoa carambola) cultivar that was developed at the Tropical Research and Education Center of the Florida Agricultural Experiment Station (FAES), an agricultural research program of the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. The cultivar was released from the FAES in 1965. [1]

  5. Carambola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carambola

    Carambola, also known as star fruit, is the fruit of Averrhoa carambola, a species of tree native to tropical Southeast Asia. [1] [2] [3] The edible fruit has distinctive ridges running down its sides (usually 5–6). [1] When cut in cross-section, it resembles a star, giving it the name of star fruit.

  6. File:Carambola Starfruit.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Carambola_Starfruit.jpg

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  7. Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Carambola cross section

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Carambola_cross_section

    As I said, I wanted to show the star, I guess a longitudinal cut will look a bit like a yellow cross section of a rugby ball or American football. The other thing is that I would have to use two fruits, and each fruit will be different from the other in terms their shapes.

  8. Morris Arkin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Arkin

    During the late 1960s, Mr. Arkin began cultivating plants and trees in his backyard, eventually developing a variety of carambola, or star fruit, that became commercially viable and was named after him. Until the early 1970s, carambola had been grown only as specimen trees in botanical gardens and experiment stations and as a curiosity in home ...

  9. List of Step by Step episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Step_by_Step_episodes

    The following is an episode list for the American television sitcom Step by Step. The series originally ran for six seasons on ABC from September 20, 1991 to August 15, 1997, then moving to CBS for its seventh and final season from September 19, 1997, to June 26, 1998. A total of 160 episodes were produced, spanning seven seasons.