Grape - Grapefruit

>Grape - Grapefruit

go home English language, you're drunk.

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English comes from a broken home, you leave it alone

>grapefruit is technically a berry

>blue raspberry

indifferentlanguages.com/words/grapefruit

Same in every relevant language

...

...

WHYYYY

>grapefruit (n.)
>1814, from grape + fruit. Said to have been so called for its taste, or perhaps because it grows in clusters. Perhaps a marketing name; it was known by various names (pomelo, shaddock) before the current one emerged. The fruit itself was known since 1693 (in Hans Sloane's catalogue of Jamaican plants); presumably it originated in Jamaica from chance hybrids between other cultivated citrus. An ornamental plant chiefly at first, not much eaten until late 19c.

This is a stupid thread.

ur a doo doo head

>eggplant

But that name actually makes sense user, they look like eggs when they aren't fully grown.

france
pineapple
groundapple
wormapple

oranges too
a lot of fruits are berrys, and all berries are fruit

>watermelon - melon
yeah, because the difference is you add more water. come off it oxford geeks

i wonder if this tasted better

Blue Razzberry

get it correct

This looks like a watermelon that's trying to trigger my trypophobia

so are grapes, what's your point?
also, peanuts are peas not nuts.

>Honeydew melon
>no honey
>no dew
>doesn't taste like honey
>doesn't taste like Dew

In Chile that is called melon tuna, but ut is not related to the fish but a variation of cactus fruit of a simular flavor and color

>trypophobia
That's not a real thing.

Can't get it wrong if it doesn't exist yet.