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Definition of Sugar apple
1. Noun. Sweet pulpy tropical fruit with thick scaly rind and shiny black seeds.
Generic synonyms: Custard Apple
Group relationships: Annona Squamosa, Sweetsop, Sweetsop Tree
Definition of Sugar apple
1. Noun. sweetsop, a West Indian tree or its fruit. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sugar Apple
Literary usage of Sugar apple
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. St. Lucia by Don Philpott (2005)
"sugar apple sugar apple is a member of the annona fruit family, and grows wild
and in gardens ... The small, soft sugar apple fruit can be peeled off in ..."
2. Manual of Tropical and Subtropical Fruits: Excluding the Banana, Coconut by Wilson Popenoe (1920)
"THE SUGAR-APPLE (Fig. 25) (Annona squamosa, L.) With the exception of the ...
The sugar-apple is more widely disseminated throughout the tropics than any ..."
3. General Notions of Chemistry by Théophile Jules Pelouze, Edmond Fremy (1854)
"Barley Sugar, Apple Sugar. — Sugar sold under these names, has for a long time
been in commerce containing neither barley nor apple. ..."
4. General Notions of Chemistry by Théophile Jules Pelouze, Edmond Fremy (1854)
"Barley Sugar, Apple Sugar. — Sugar sold under these names, has for a long time
been in commerce containing neither barley nor apple. ..."
5. Fruit Recipes: A Manual of the Food Value of Fruits and Nine Hundred by Riley Maria Fletcher Berry (1907)
"In appearance the sugar apple somewhat resembles tiny, crownless pineapples.
The Sour Sop (Anona muricata), is much larger than the Sweet Sop, ..."
6. Cayman Islands by Don Philpott (2002)
"sugar apple sugar apple is a member of the annona fruit family, and grows wild
... The small, soft sugar apple fruit can be peeled off in strips when ripe, ..."
7. Antigua and Barbuda by Don Philpott, Brian Anderson, Ellen Anderson (2004)
"Other fruits Soursop is a member of the same family as the sugar apple, ...
sugar apple is a member of the annona fruit family, and grows wild and in ..."