WordNet
n. edible reproductive body of a seed plant especially one having sweet flesh
Usage examples of "edible fruit".
But then reflect that the vast majority of wild plants are unsuitable for obvious reasons: they are woody, they produce no edible fruit, and their leaves and roots are also inedible.
It bears a sweet, edible fruit, somewhat like that of the Common Fig, but produced in racemes, on the older branches.
We ate our fish raw to get the maximum vitamins from them, because there wasn't much edible fruit in the dry season.
It was the crejimba, of the palm family, which does not bear edible fruit.
After trying to climb the tree and seeing what you thought was a cluster of edible fruit at the top, you fell asleep so that your memory of the event was a mixture of dreams and reality.
Now those people are gone, but the city remains, producing breathable air, growing edible fruit, supporting at least some omnivorous wildlife as though in anticipation of the needs of the mantas, manufacturing things for human use.
She recognized a number of briars and bushes that produced edible fruit in season, but the coolness of the air and the yellowish hues of the not-distant eaves of the forest told her this was not the season.
Others have been new kinds of plants--house-plants with edible fruit or flowers, pie plants, and more.
Even so, an edible fruit grows high in the baobab, and if I could find a few, I would augment my lunch with some of these hard-shelled, woody delicacies, known to many Africans as “.