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berry

small pulpy fruit / botanical fleshy fruit

/ˈbɛɹi/

Noun
pl: berries

In common parlance, a berry evokes images of small, juicy, colorful fruits like strawberries or raspberries. It carries connotations of freshness, sweetness, and the outdoors, often associated with foraging or summer harvests. There is a sharp divide between the culinary and botanical usage. In everyday conversation, 'berry' refers to the size and texture of the fruit. In scientific contexts, however, it describes a specific structural development (a fleshy fruit from one ovary), which leads to the counterintuitive fact that bananas and watermelons are berries, while strawberries are not.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon; Sarah is staring at her monitor while David is in a 'synergy' meeting.
David Smith

Just saw some organic berry mix in the breakroom. Want me to snag some?

David Smith
Sarah
Sarah

I'm swamped with those edits, but sure. Only if it isn't mushy.

💡
David is trying to be helpful in a casual way, while Sarah uses the phrase 'swamped' (an idiom meaning overwhelmed with work) to signal her exhaustion and current workload.

Meanings

Nounsmall pulpy fruit

A small, pulpy, and often edible fruit, typically consisting of a fleshy pericarp surrounding a few seeds.

"She picked a handful of fresh blueberries from the bush."

Nounbotanical fleshy fruit

In botanical terms, a fleshy fruit produced from a single ovary, such as a tomato or a banana.

"Botanically speaking, a watermelon is actually a type of berry."

Etymology

Derived from the Old English berie, which originates from the Proto-Germanic beria. This root is cognate with the Old High German beri and Old Norse ber, all descending from a reconstructed Proto-Indo-European root meaning a small fruit or seed-bearing body.

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error