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Definition of Sorb apple
1. Noun. Medium-sized European tree resembling the rowan but bearing edible fruit.
Terms within: Sorb
Generic synonyms: Mountain Ash
Specialized synonyms: Sorbus Torminalis, Wild Service Tree
2. Noun. Acid gritty-textured fruit.
Generic synonyms: Edible Fruit
Group relationships: Service Tree, Sorb Apple Tree, Sorbus Domestica
Definition of Sorb apple
1. Noun. A European fruit tree, ''Sorbus domestica'', also called the service tree ¹
2. Noun. The fruit of this tree, also called the sorb ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sorb Apple
Literary usage of Sorb apple
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English: Containing Words from the by Thomas Wright (1904)
"... SORB-APPLE, ». The fruit of the service-tree. Some mile of this town, we were
S'-t Hpf Bv a tort of country ..."
2. Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English: Containing Words from the by Thomas Wright (1857)
"... SORB-APPLE, s. The fruit of the service-tree. Some mile o' this town, we were
set upon By a sort of country fellows. ..."
3. Encyclopaedia Americana: A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature by Francis Lieber, Thomas Gamaliel Bradford (1832)
"... steadfastly maintained the liberties of the Gallican church (qv), opposed the
VOL. xi. 42 sorb apple ; the fruit of the service tree. (See Service Tree. ..."
4. New English and Italian Pronouncing and Explanatory Dictionary by John Millhouse, Ferdinando Bracciforti (1889)
"Í. to soar, fly high; to By merely for pleasure (as ihe hawk) Sorba, if. service,
sorb-apple ... sorb-apple-tree ..."
5. Dizionario delle lingue italiana ed ingleseby Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti by Giuseppe Marco Antonio Baretti (1807)
"Sorb», sf service, sorb-apple. ... a.lj. tj^tiii'4 like a sorb-apple; of a rough
or sour taste. ..."
6. The Magazine of Horticulture, Botany, and All Useful Discoveries and by C M Hovey (1838)
"One sort of tree is seen here more frequently than the others, and that is the
sorb-apple, many of which appear hundreds of years old. One of these trees, ..."