| fruit |
In botany, a fruit is the ripened ovary, together with its seeds, of a flowering plant. In cuisine, when discussing fruit as food, the term usually refers to just those plant fruits that are sweet and fleshy, examples of which would include plum, apple and orange. However, a great many common vegetables, as well as nuts and grains, are the fruit of the plants they come from. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit
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| frustration |
A term used in the physics of spin glasses and also applied to interactions in some types of neural networks, indicating the tendency for conflicting demands to be placed on spin or neuronal interactions. In the former case, this arises due to the existence of both ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic interactions between spins; in the latter, owing to excitatory and inhibitory inputs experienced by neurons.
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/templarser/complexglos.html
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| fruiting body |
Any of various complex, spore-bearing fungalstructures.
Ãâó: library.thinkquest.org/25368/e_glossary.html
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| fruit |
the final reproductive organ in a plant; in a eucalypt a composite structure of the seed-bearing capsule held within a woody hypanthium, opening at the top where the seed are shed after dehiscence
Ãâó: www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/cd-keys/Euclid/sample/html/gl...
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| fruiting body |
In fungi, the organ in which meiosis occurs and sexual spores are produced.
Ãâó: helios.bto.ed.ac.uk/bto/glossary/ef.htm
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