¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Blueberries
1. blueberry [n] - See also: blueberry
Lexicographical Neighbors of Blueberries
Literary usage of Blueberries
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Income Opportunities in Special Forest Products: Self-Help Suggestions for by Margaret G. Thomas (1994)
"Lowbush blueberries are harvested commercially from native wild stock in Maine
and eastern Canada. It is believed that some of our native lowbush blueberry ..."
2. Transactions of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.: Horticultural Hall by Massachusetts Horticultural Society, W.D. Ticknor & Co, James Englebert Teschemacher (1890)
"HUCKLEBERRIES AND blueberries — GAYLUSSACIA AND VACCINIUM SP. ... L., under the
name of Bush blueberries. Gray in his Synoptical Flora applies in a generic ..."
3. North of Boston by Robert Frost (1917)
"blueberries " You ought to have seen what I saw on my way To the village, ...
to-day: blueberries as big as the end of your thumb, Real sky-blue, and heavy, ..."
4. A Boy on a Farm: At Work and at Play by Jacob Abbott (1903)
"The blueberries were plentiful, but there were no bears. The reason why the
mountain was so famous for bears, when, in fact, ..."
5. Cyclopedia of American Horticulture: Comprising Suggestions for Cultivation by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Wilhelm Miller (1902)
"In this way the birches and alders are subdued and the blueberries spring up ...
The blueberries have an advantage over other small fruits in that they will ..."
6. Putnam's Vegetable Book by Mae Savell Croy (1917)
"blueberries blueberries are far more delicious than the blackberry or dewberry,
... blueberries require cross pollination. Berries self-pollinated or ..."
7. Southey's Common-place Book by Robert Southey (1876)
"blueberries on bushes which grow to eighteen inches or two feet, but generally
much lower ; a fine plum bloom. Hips in such quantities as to make the spots ..."
8. Arctic Researches, and Life Among the Esquimaux: Being the Narrative of an by Charles Francis Hall (1865)
"—A Pack of Wolves.—Glories of the calm clear Night.—Aurora again.—A Land abounding
with Reindeer.—blueberries.—Method of taking Salmon.—Bow and Arrows. ..."