Raspberry

For the sound made by humans to simulate flatulence (blowing a raspberry) see the USA term, Bronx cheer Rubus idaeus
   
The Raspberry or Red Raspberry, (Rubus idaeus) is a plant that produces a tart, sweet, red composite fruit (not a true berry) in late summer or early autumn. The fruit is similar to that of the blackberry, but is smaller, softer, and of course a different colour. It grows typically in forest clearings or fields, particularly where fire or wood-cutting has produced open space for colonization by this opportunistic colonizer of disturbed soil. As a cultivated plant, it is easy to grow and has a tendency to spread unless cut back. Two types are commercially available: the wild-type summer bearing, that produces an abundance of fruit on second-year canes within a relatively short period in midsummer, and double- or "ever"- bearing plants, which also bear a few fruit on first-year canes in the autumn, as well as the summer crop on second-year canes. Raspberries can be cultivated from USDA plant hardiness zones 9 to 4. A golden Raspberry, which is pale yellow, has been selected by horticulturalists. The black raspberry, also called a blackcap, is not the same plant, being a cultivar (usually) of Rubus occidentalis, a North American species. Several other non-cultivated Rubus species are also called raspberries.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
monica bellucci
naomi campbell
linda evangelista
mr. olympia
heidi klum
malabar
erika eleniak
kate moss
carol alt
eugene bleuler
ram air turbine
wedding breakfast
viceroy of norway
nuu chah nulth
bridegroom
chloral hydrate
portia de rossi
maid of honor
courtney thorne smith
the sand reckoner
lisa nicole carson
bridesmaid
grackle
best man
anna friel
elle macpherson
module (mathematics)
catherine mccormack
ardagh
haley joel osment
european union law
occupation of denmark
roger iii of sicily
fortune 500
hawaiian honeycreeper
netsuke
oranjestad
metallothionein
ehrgeiz
ventricular system
uppland county
monika schnarre
kathy ireland
sooner district