Drupaceous - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: drupaceousDrupaceous
Producing or pertaining to drupes having the form of drupes as drupaceous trees or fruits...
Drupal
Drupaceous...
Natal plum
The drupaceous fruit of two South African shrubs of the genus Carissa formerly Arduina Carissa bispinosa and Carissa grandiflora It is also called amatungulu...
Ogeechee lime
The acid olive shaped drupaceous fruit of a species of tupelo Nyssa capitata which grows in swamps in Georgia and Florida...
Quandong
The edible drupaceous fruit of an Australian tree Fusanus acuminatus of the Sandalwood family called also quandang...
Sebesten
The mucilaginous drupaceous fruit of two East Indian trees Cordia Myxa and Cordia latifolia sometimes used medicinally in pectoral diseases...
Fruit
Fruit, as to larceny of and damage to, see Larceny Act, 1916, s. 8(3), and Malicious Damage Act, 1861, ss. 23, 24; as to compensation to market garden tenant for fruit trees and fruit bushes, see ss. 48 and 49 and Sched. III. Of the Agricultural Holdings Act, 1923, which repealed and replaced the Agricultural Holdings Act, 1908, which itself had replaced the Market Gardeners Compensation Act, 1895, see Saunders-Jacob v. Yates, (1933) 2 KB 240 (market garden includes part of private premises so treated). As to importation and marking of foreign fruit, see AGRICULTURAL ACTS (marketing-produce-returns).In Webster Comprehensive Dictionary, International Edition at p. 509, the word 'fruit' has been defined, the edible, pulpy mass, covering the seeds of various plants and trees. They are classified as fleshy, as gourds, melons, oranges, apples, pears, berries, etc. drupaceous as cherries, peaches, plums, apricots, and others containing stones; dry as nuts, capsuls, ashenia, follicles, legume...
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