|
Definition of Berry
1. Verb. Pick or gather berries. "In the summer they like to go out and Berry"; "We went berrying in the summer"
2. Noun. Any of numerous small and pulpy edible fruits; used as desserts or in making jams and jellies and preserves.
Specialized synonyms: Bilberry, European Blueberry, Whortleberry, Huckleberry, Blueberry, Boxberry, Checkerberry, Spiceberry, Teaberry, Wintergreen, Cranberry, Cowberry, Lingonberry, Lowbush Cranberry, Mountain Cranberry, Currant, Blackberry, Boysenberry, Dewberry, Loganberry, Raspberry, Juneberry, Saskatoon, Serviceberry, Shadberry, Strawberry, Hackberry, Sugarberry, Persimmon, Acerola, Barbados Cherry, Surinam Cherry, West Indian Cherry, Mulberry
3. Noun. A small fruit having any of various structures, e.g., simple (grape or blueberry) or aggregate (blackberry or raspberry).
4. Noun. United States rock singer (born in 1931).
Definition of Berry
1. n. Any small fleshy fruit, as the strawberry, mulberry, huckleberry, etc.
2. v. i. To bear or produce berries.
3. n. A mound; a hillock.
Definition of Berry
1. Proper noun. (surname from=Middle English) ¹
2. Proper noun. (surnames male given name). ¹
3. Proper noun. (rare) (English female given name). ¹
4. Noun. A small fruit, of any one of many varieties. ¹
5. Noun. (botany) A soft fruit which develops from a superior ovary and contains seeds not encased in pits. ¹
6. Verb. To pick berries. ¹
7. Noun. (defn English) ¹
8. Noun. (dialectal) A burrow, especially a rabbit's burrow. ¹
9. Noun. An excavation; a military mine. ¹
10. Verb. (transitive) To beat; give a beating to; thrash. ¹
11. Verb. (transitive) To thresh (grain). ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Berry
1. to produce berries (fleshy fruits) [v -RIED, -RYING, -RIES]
Medical Definition of Berry
1. A fleshy or pulpy indehiscent fruit with the seed embedded in the fleshy tissue of the pericarp. Compare: drupe, pyrene. (09 Oct 1997)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Berry
Literary usage of Berry
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Dictionary of National Biography by Sidney Lee (1908)
"In 1802 some of the students, including Charles Berry, developed heretical views.
Berry left Homer- ton, and in 1803, at the age of twenty, became minister ..."
2. Journal of Economic Entomology by Entomological Society of America, American Association of Economic Entomologists (1911)
"This insect may be called the California Chirstmas-berry tingis. ... The presence
of the pest on the Christmas-berry can easily be detected by the brown, ..."
3. A Dictionary of Books Relating to America, from Its Discovery to the Present by Joseph Sabin, Wilberforce Eames, Bibliographical Society of America, Robert William Glenroie Vail (1869)
"By Harrison Berry, The Property of SW Price, Covington. ... The Speech of Henry
Berry, (of Jefferson,) in the House of Delegates of Virginia, ..."
4. The North American Sylva, Or, A Description of the Forest Trees, of the by François André Michaux, Augustus L Hillhouse (1819)
"THE banks of the Delaware above Philadelphia may be considered as the north-eastern
limit of the Hack Berry. East of the mountains it is restricted within ..."
5. History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate, 1649-1656 by Samuel Rawson Gardiner (1903)
"28. accordingly arrested and brought before Berry at brought be- Worcester.
Berry, who joined to kindliness of heart fore Berry. a spice of humour, ..."