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Odd Question
A friend asked me a question the other that really had me thinking, so I thought I would share it with you all and see what the consensus is.
The question is this, is a pea a fruit or a vegetable, and why is it one or the other? |
Re: Odd Question
i always though of it as a vegetable, cause of the little pods they come in. i know thats not an answer but just my thinkin
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Re: Odd Question
hmmm did a good ole search and found.
The noun "pea" has 3 senses in WordNet. 1. pea -- (seed of a pea plant) 2. pea -- (the fruit or seed of a pea plant) 3. pea, pea plant -- (a leguminous plant of the genus Pisum with small white flowers and long green pods containing edible green seeds) then. pea: a small round vegetable that comes from a pod. who knows? |
Re: Odd Question
I always thought a pea was a pulse, and hence a veg......I know a tomato is a fruit and not a veg...but what's an aubergine?
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Re: Odd Question
Mmmmm, good one. According to Collins English Dictionary a pea is a fruit. Got to admit, I'd never really thought about it before. :)
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Re: Odd Question
well, what's a bean then?
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Re: Odd Question
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting one in the fruit salad.
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Re: Odd Question
Definition of fruit - seed with its envelope esp. edible one. Seeing as peas (seeds) come in pods (envelopes) I would say fruit. I have always called them vegetables though...but if Collins English Dictionary says fruit then I have to concur.
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Re: Odd Question
Found this on a science site:
WHAT IS A FRUIT? A fruit is the ripe ovary of a flower. There are four main groups of fruit;
WHAT IS A VEGETABLE? Vegetables are edible plants. Some grow above the ground and the following parts are eaten;
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Re: Odd Question
The last one seems to contradict itself by lumping fruits and seeds in with vegeatables.
I have found this explanation:- " Anthony R. Brach, Ph.D. ================================================== ============ Botanically speaking, anything that bears seeds is a fruit. The fruit forms from the reproductive part of the plant, i.e., the flower. The ovary of the flower becomes the fruit and inside the seeds form. So a tomato comes from the flower and inside are the seeds. So it is a fruit. A nut is a seed and the shell is the fruit. Anything from a part of the plant that is not the flower is vegetative, i.e., does not reproduce. So leaves, stems and roots are vegetables. So lettuce, carrots and potatoes are vegetables." |
Re: Odd Question
Just to confuse things even more:- I did a quiz the other day where one of the questions was "Which part of the strawberry is the actual fruit?" and the answer was "the seed"
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Re: Odd Question
That makes no sense at all. A Strawberry carries it's seeds on the outside of it's skin. Little yellowish brown things, you can't miss em.
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Re: Odd Question
That's what I thought. I get them stuck between my teeth, especially in strawberry jam.
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Re: Odd Question
VEGETABLE OF COURSE! its green.
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Re: Odd Question
What do you guys make of this entry ?
To the best of my knowledge and research the definition of fruit is: The ripened seed-bearing part of a plant when fleshy and edible. In other words, a "fruit" is any fleshy material covering a seed or seeds. Most fruits, from a horticultural (science of cultivating) perspective, are grown on a woody plant, with the exception of strawberries. Or you can say, generally a fruit is the edible part of the plant that contains the seeds. So your eggplant, tomato, cucumber and zucchini are fruits. To the best of my knowledge and research definition of vegetable is: A herbaceous (green and leaf like in appearance or texture) plant cultivated for an edible part, as roots, stems, leaves or flowers. Or you may say a vegetable is the edible stems, leaves, and roots of the plant. Some people think rhubarb is a fruit, because it is used to make pies. But, rhubarb is a vegetable. |
Re: Odd Question
So the answer is, a pea is a dry fruit
http://scidiv.bcc.ctc.edu/rkr/Biolog...FruitTypes.pdf I have been told that vegetarians wont eat chick peas as they may contain animal products, and that sweet peas are delicious served with cream. |
Re: Odd Question
How about this too?
'Strawberry, common name for low, perennial herbs of a genus of the rose family, and also for their edible fruit. Strawberries are native to temperate regions throughout the world and have become an important and widely distributed crop on farms and in home gardens. The white flowers, which are borne in cymes, have a five-cleft calyx, five rounded petals, many stamens, and numerous pistils. The fruit is not actually a berry but an aggregate of numerous achenes distributed on an enlarged, pulpy, scarlet receptacle © 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. That's from Encarta which seems to bear out the theory that what we regard as the seeds of the strawberry are in fact lots of little fruits and what we think of as the fruit is a pulpy scarlet receptacle. Doesn't sound very appetising that does it? |
Re: Odd Question
ooh how do chick peas contain animal products? In a way I suppose all plants could contain animal by-products depending on what they are fertilised with. (I'm learning a lot on here.)
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Re: Odd Question
i consider it a vegetable because it comes from a plant
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Re: Odd Question
Saitou:
by that reasoning so are apples, oranges, pears, etc. |
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