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  2. fruit” as uncountable noun with singular verb agreement. The uncountable noun “fruit” (which takes singular verb agreement, like a mass noun) also exists. This is probably the most common use of the word “fruit”, so I won’t supply any examples. “fruit” as countified mass noun, with countable plural “fruits” or “fruit

  3. Should we say less or fewer "fruit and vegetables"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/106909

    Less fruit and vegetables. Fewer vegetables and fruit. We say "less fruit", because fruit is uncountable in this sentence, and "fewer vegetables" because vegetables is countable. When fruit and vegetables are combined, the rule of proximity tells us that the word nearest to less / fewer determines which form we should use.

  4. What's the difference between "rind", "peel", and "skin"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/510373/whats-the-difference-between-rind...

    the skin or rind of a fruit, vegetable, etc. Skin is a general word to refer to outer coatings. It has uses beyond fruit. the external covering or integument of an animal body, especially when soft and flexible. any integumentary covering, casing, outer coating, or surface layer, as an investing membrane, the rind or peel of fruit, or a film on ...

  5. 1.2 The edible pulpy part of a fruit or vegetable. halve the avocados and scrape out the flesh. Calling it 'pulpy' doesn't mean it has been squashed. It means the soft part that isn't the skin/rind or pips/stone. You don't have to call it 'fruit flesh', just 'flesh' will do when the fruit has already been mentioned.

  6. "Peel", "pare", and "skin" - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/13987

    4. The meaning of those verbs is: pare: trim something by cutting away its outer edges; cut off the skin of something. peel: remove the outer covering or skin from a fruit, vegetable, or shrimp. skin: remove the skin from an animal, a fruit, or vegetable. Carlo pared his thumbnails with his knife. Peel off the skins and thickly slice the potatoes.

  7. grammar - how much vegetables or how many vegetables? - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/182954/how-much-vegetables-or-how-many...

    53 1 1 4. 5. You should use "how much", because you are not expecting an answer of the form: "our bodies need thirty-seven vegetables". However, "vegetables" is unusual in this regard.

  8. Single word for a plant's fruit/vegetable?

    english.stackexchange.com/.../409590/single-word-for-a-plants-fruit-vegetable

    synonyms: food, foodstuff (s), products; harvest, crops, fruit, vegetables, greens "fresh produce". However if you specifically mean the part of the plant containing seeds, as your comment implies, then Fruit is the correct word: Fruit (noun) the sweet and fleshy product of a tree or other plant that contains seed and can be eaten as food. Share.

  9. Why do you call it “the produce aisle”?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/119203

    Produce here refers to “fresh fruits and vegetables”. It’s the noun version of that word, not the verb, and so its stress falls on the first syllable. Therefore the produce aisle is the place where such things are found. Before the supermarket, it’s the sort of thing you’d find at your greengrocer, if you were so fortunate as to have one.

  10. Fruit could mean a single piece of fruit or multiple of the same type of fruit. Fruits means multiple types of fruit. An apple is a fruit. Apples are fruit. Apples and oranges are fruits. This pattern is pretty common. Some other examples are fish and fishes, and people and peoples.

  11. grammar - Is "bared fruit" grammatical? - English Language &...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/226259/is-bared-fruit-grammatical

    Improve this answer. answered Feb 8, 2015 at 3:44. Deepak. 5,354 16 26. And "bared" is the past tense of "bare", which is to make naked, to uncover, or to expose. Example: she bared a baby boy = she took the baby's clothes off. Compare: she bore a baby boy = she had one (produced one, as it were). Your example: your career bared fruit = it ...