Find the word definition

Crossword clues for fruitage

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Fruitage

Fruitage \Fruit"age\, n. [F. fruitage.]

  1. Fruit, collectively; fruit, in general; fruitery.

    The trees . . . ambrosial fruitage bear.
    --Milton.

  2. Product or result of any action; effect, good or ill.

Wiktionary
fruitage

n. 1 fruit, collectively. 2 Product or result of any action, effect, good, or ill.

WordNet
fruitage

n. the yield of fruit; "a tree highly recommended for its fruitage"

Usage examples of "fruitage".

Then, too, the truth is no high fruitage will ever issue from a life crushed by slavish subjection.

He led me to the plot where I had thrown The fennel of my days on wasted ground, And in that riot of sad weeds I found The fruitage of a life that was my own.

The iron framework was ornamented at intervals with outbreaks of iron leafage and iron fruitage, which had grown rusty with time.

Yea, standest smiling in thy future grave, Serene and brave, With unremitting breath Inhaling life from death, Thine epitaph writ fair in fruitage eloquent, Thyself thy monument.

I give it not its fruitage and its green, But clothe it with a glory all unseen.

I wish I could see some hope that their wantonly shed blood has sown seeds that will one day blossom, and bear a rich fruitage of benefit to mankind, but it saddens me beyond expression that I can not.

Shakespeare gathered the fruitage of all who went before him, he has sown the seeds for all who shall ever come after him.

The many meanings glistening up When Nature to her nurslings kind, Hands them the fruitage and the cup!

The key will shriek in the lock, The door will rustily hinge, Will open on features of mould, To vanish corrupt at a glimpse, And mock as the wild echoes mock, Soulless in mimic, doth Greed Or the passion for fruitage tinge That dream, for your parricide imps To wing through the body of Time, Yourselves in slaying him slay.

Something of extravagance there may be in those brilliant clusters of romantic words that are everywhere found in the work of Shakespeare, or Spenser, or Keats, but they are the natural leafage and fruitage of a luxuriant imagination, which, lacking these, could not attain to its full height.

In the eyes of this latter infidelity history is not a procession or a progression, but only a series of disconnected pictures, each little era rounded with its own growth, fruitage, and decay, a series of incidents or experiments, without even the string of a far-reaching purpose to connect them.

Through what tears and sweat and pain, Must he gain Fruitage from the tree of life?

In May and June it attracts attention by its bright green feathery foliage set off by cream-coloured bloom, whilst in September it bears a brilliant fruitage of berries, richly orange in colour at first, but presently of a clear ripe vermilion.

Climates too cold for fruitage in the latter would be too cold for the uniformly safe wintering of crimson clover.

And lower down the great forest trees arch over it, and the sunbeams trickle through them, and dance in many a quiet pool, turning the far-down sands to gold, brightening majestic tree-ferns, and shining on the fragile polypodium tamariscinum which clings tremblingly to the branches of the graceful waringhan, on a beautiful lygodium which adorns the uncouth trunk of an artocarpus, on glossy ginger-worts and trailing yams, on climbers and epiphytes, and on gigantic lianas which, climbing to the tops of the tallest trees, descend in vast festoons, many of them with orange and scarlet flowers and fruitage, passing from tree to tree, and interlacing the forest with a living network, while selaginellas and lindsayas, and film ferns, and trichomanes radicans drape the rocks in feathery green, along with mosses scarcely distinguishable from ferns.