Do you consider the tomatoe to be a fruit or vegetable?:mad2:
Well!?:mad2:
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Do you consider the tomatoe to be a fruit or vegetable?:mad2:
Well!?:mad2:
Fruit.
Fruit, duh.
Its a large argument in my family from time to time.... I guess no one else has the debate.Quote:
Originally Posted by Xaven
Whoa, why so angry?
It's officially a fruit, but it just fits in with the vegetable posse.
I consider you spelling hilarious, but i'm just messing with you lol. I consider it a fruit. It tastes good with pepper and salt on it, or fried O_o
It's neither, but I usually grouped it into the Vegetable category, despite how much more sense it makes as a fruit.
Go on and point out the major errors. I want to see the MAJOR errors that makes it hilarious..;)Quote:
Originally Posted by Jackpot
Fruit :)
Vegetable.
Lol i thought tomatoe was spelt wrong, but i was wrong :pQuote:
Originally Posted by lovehurts
Fruit, and it makes a wonderful juice. :)
It's tomato. And tomatoes. And tomatoey.Quote:
Originally Posted by Jackpot
No "e" when it's singular.
I was doing that onpurpose lol Tomatoes are good on hamburgers and sandwhichs also
http://www.google.com/search?num=100...=off&q=tomatoeQuote:
Originally Posted by Xaven
10 pages spell it wrong on google I really dont care that I added an e. You can talk about hanging me for adding an e but you wont find me at the end of the rope.
I've always thought of it as a fruit.
I always think of corn as a fruit. I eat corn flavored ice cream all the time.
Food.
Dude NASTY...UghQuote:
Originally Posted by RSL
Botanically speaking, a tomato is the ovary of a magnoliophyta, or in other words: A fruit, or, more precisely, a berry of some sort.
Tomatoes are classified as fruit, despite tasting and looking like vegetables
vegetables have a taste?
Weird, and here I thought peppers and okra and asparagus and cucumbers and squash and corn and cabbage all had unique tastes!
Cream asparagus for supper kids! Cabbage in your salads!
It's a fruit, duh.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TomatoQuote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia (about the tomato)
Why does it have to always ba a rude duh? ITs obvious that some people think it should be a vegetable so why are you so negative. Im enjoying the thread myself. If you are going to contribute to a thread you shouldnt be rude you should be informative and not both. May I fart for the wind to carry it to your face.Quote:
Originally Posted by Æ¿æƒ2
Have seeds? Is fruit. Crouch, lest ye be attacked by stench. ^
Damn.
It's a fruit? Learning somethin' new everyday...
Yay for you and knowing things and saying them before me!Quote:
Originally Posted by Decessus
Tomatoes are terrible berries, though. They're pretty good in comparison to other vegatables though. I think that's why people want them to be vegatables.
Yes berries are usually sweet and nice. Tomatoes, yuckie. Never liked 'em.
Ok, well whether people think it should be a vegetable or not, that doesn't change the fact that it is a fruit.Quote:
Originally Posted by lovehurts
Also, if you don't like the way that I respond you can always add me to your ignore list.
Or I can suggest that you be more polite. The suggestion is not a bad one. Maybe Im just over reacting. Let's not spamm though.Quote:
Originally Posted by Æ¿æƒ2
It doesn't mean that all that have seeds are fruit, you know. Squash has seeds, and it's a vegetable.Quote:
Originally Posted by oddler
Tomato is a fruit.
It is a fruit...
However legally for trade and tax purposes it is classified as a vegetable.
So both. :D
I call it a vegetable because at Subway, it's in the vegetable area. :)
:mad2: <-- A tomato is an angry face.
Actually, if you want to get technical, squash are also fruit. A fruit is, by definition, the ovary of an angiosperm, or more simply, the part of the plant that contains the seeds. :DQuote:
It doesn't mean that all that have seeds are fruit, you know. Squash has seeds, and it's a vegetable.
Tomato is a fruit.
Animal :o
Winner! It is both. Although not just for trade/tax reasons. The word 'vegetable' can refer to pretty much any edible plant, including all fruits if you really, really wanted it to. But not many people use it in that way. It's up to the user. The word 'vegetable' has no scientific purpose so it's not very easy to say what is and is not a vegetable. Meanwhile, the word fruit does have a scientific definition, being a ripened ovary of a flowering plant.Quote:
Originally Posted by Arrianna
So technically (and not just because of tax and trade) the tomato really is both a fruit and a vegetable.
It's a fruit. =D
It's neither.
to·ma·to Audio pronunciation of "tomato" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (t-mt, -mä-)
n. pl. to·ma·toes
1.
1. A widely cultivated South American plant (Lycopersicon esculentum) having edible, fleshy, usually red fruit.
2. The fruit of this plant.
2. Slang. A woman regarded as attractive.
I don't think I've ever heard it being used for an attractive woman. But I never know what's popular these days.
Yes; in the scientific community, it is considered a fruit. A lot of "vegtables" are. They yeild the nutritional value of a vegtable though, and they do not produce a sweetened flavor, therefoe, they are traditionally known as vegtables. Simply put: Chefs will call them a vegie due to taste and nutrients, a scientist will call them a fruit due to their cosmic implimentations :)Quote:
Originally Posted by DarkLadyNyara
Also, scientists won't call them vegetables because vegetable is not a scientific term. :)Quote:
Originally Posted by bipper
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Originally Posted by Loony BoB
I am fairly sure that vegtable is a scientific term in agriculture . :confused:
Quote:
Originally Posted by bipper
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
A tomato is neither, its ketchup.
The main part of a plant is a vegetable, the things that grow off of plants are fruits. Things that grow off of trees, bushes, and vines are fruit. Carrots and potatoes are vegetables because the plant grows off of them, rather than the other way around.
Flower are fruit? What about lettuce and cabbage? Nuts? The fig? Peas?Quote:
Originally Posted by ShlupQuack
umm.... that is no source; it is wikipedia :) Agriculture is a science, and vegtable is and agricultural term.Quote:
Originally Posted by Loony BoB
ps. nuts are also considered fruit - to science. Flowers are not though. A fruit must bear seed and the nutrients for the seed to grow.
If you wanna get technical; a tomato is a berry.
Show me a source that says otherwise.Quote:
Originally Posted by bipper
Also, fruit is a botanical term, and vegetable is not. Where is an online encyclopedia other than Wikipedia then? I'm sure the World Book Encyclopedia is where I first read about this.
EDIT:
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Originally Posted by Britannica Concice Encyclopedia
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Originally Posted by MSN Encarta
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Originally Posted by Wikipedia, again
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Originally Posted by University of Illinois
Fruit, because Wikipedia said so! :p
Quote:
Originally Posted by bipper
It may not have a botanical name; but it is a scientific term when referenced in the science known as agriculture :)
When you bring botanical names into play, the whole thing becomes a non issue lol.guess not.
See what your encyclopedias say about fruit.
The newton says this: http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasc...0/bot00134.htm
Quote:
Botanically speaking, anything that bears or is a seed is considered a fruit.
There are different kinds of fruit, ie nuts are a kind of
fruit. Vegetables
are any part of the plant that doesn't have to do with making new plants.
Lettuce is a leaf, carrot is a root, celery is a stem. I think I heard a
story of how the legal definition of a fruit vs. veggie was established as a
way of avoiding taxes or tarifs or something.
vanhoeck
Further proving that vegetable has no specific definition - some scientists are saying one thing, some scientists are saying another.Quote:
Originally Posted by bipper
Someone on the same page...
Quote:
I do not have an adequate definition for 'vegetable', but my feeling for its
routine meaning is any part of a plant consumed whether a stem (celery), a
leaf (lettuce), a root or tuber (radish, or potato, respectively), and in
some cases the fruit of fertilization or structures bearing them (cucumbers,
yes-tomatoes). Add to this such items as mushrooms (basidiocarps of fungi)
and you get the idea....the term vegetable has come to mean most anything
which is not animal or mineral which we find in the 'produce' section of the
supermarket. Thus, the term vegetable has somewhat lost a botanical
usefulness in that there are more specific terms to use depending on the
particular structure being discussed.
they have a scientific defintion, just not a botanic definition. As agriculture is a science, and defines vegtables seperately from fruit. Ag = science so Ag term = science term
Agriculture is an art. ;)
ag·ri·cul·ture Audio pronunciation of "agriculture" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (gr-klchr)
n.
The science, art, and business of cultivating soil, producing crops, and raising livestock; farming.
See? I was right. :D
I was too! :D
umm, isn't the cucumber a fruit too? it has seeds.
'tis.
Bob is :cool: as a cucumber
"INTELLIGENCE is knowing that tomatoes are fruit. WISDOM is knowing not to put tomatoes in fruit salad."
That scrolls across for my screensaver at work.
:laugh: You wouldn't happen to have a source for that quote would you?Quote:
Originally Posted by JKTrix
Well there are other criteria too, fatty.Quote:
Originally Posted by Loony BoB
Aren't beans fruit? :confused:
I know some members who are fruits =D
EDIT: I voted "my vote doesn't count" because it had zero votes. Vote for that so my vote doesn't stay lonely!
im backing up my point now. I think tomatos ar enot a fruit or begetable, but a condiment. you use it to add on to other foods for example, hamburgers, saladas, french fries and more.
A Tomato is a fruit, of course.
gud one lolQuote:
Originally Posted by Jackpot
It's a fruit, obviously.
WAIT! WHAT ABOUT BEANS! You know, the seeds in their nifty pods.
It's actually a fruit, but it's a vegetable imho.
Tomato is fruity tooty.
OMG I can't belive that this thread went on this long haha. Tomatos are fruit, becuase vegetables don't have seeds,but fruits do and a tomoto has seeds. or somthing like that.
but is a vegtable a full righted human being!? :confused:
Tomatoes are vegetables for Chris sake!!Quote:
Originally Posted by Distain
Find a dictionary that defines vegetable as something that doesn't have seeds. Also, what does that make beans? Pumpkin?Quote:
Originally Posted by Distain
Again, fruit and vegetables are not mutually exclusive - one can be both.
Quotes from Wikipedia:
In botany, a fruit is the ripened ovary—together with seeds—of a flowering plant.
However, a great many common vegetables, as well as nuts and grains, are the fruit of the plant species they come from.
and this diagram: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Fruitandveg.png
I see tomatoes as veg because they do not belong in a fruit salad. Plus tomatoes are savoury and are not eaten for dessert.
http://forums.eyesonff.com/showpost....0&postcount=13Quote:
Originally Posted by Loony BoB
I don't like to consider it a fruit because I'd feel weird putting fruits in my sandwiches :p