white flowers {apple, flower}.
Fig trees {banyan} grow in India.
African and Australian trees {baobab} can have trunks that store water and hanging fruits like gourds.
Malaysian evergreens {breadfruit} can have large yellow fruits.
Trees {china berry} {Pride-of-India tree} can have double compound leaves and purple or lilac drupes in clusters.
Trees {malus} {crabapple tree} include wild crabapple and Iowa crabapple, with pink and white flowers. Hawthorns and crabapples are similar.
white, pink, purple, or crimson flowers {ficus} {fig, tree} (Adenium).
Small evergreen trees {guava} produce ovoid fruits.
Trees {hackberry} {sugarberry} can have purple drupes when ripe.
Trees {mulberry} can have mulberries and have milky juice. Mulberries include white mulberry in China, paper mulberry, and red mulberry. Osage-orange or bowdeck has orange bark, thorns, sexes on different trees, and green-yellow seven-centimeter to twelve-centimeter spherical fruit masses.
Trees {orchard tree} can include apple, quince, pear, peach, cherry, apricot, and almond. Bud growing strength, prevailing winds, and nearby tree positions affect tree shape.
Trees {persimmon, tree} can be smooth, have round orange-colored fruits with red seeds, have shiny leaves, have corrugated bark, have medium height, and live in south, middle, and west USA. Red seeds are edible just after cold weather starts.
Prune-related trees {prunus} include almond, cherry, peach, and plum.
Cherry trees {cherry tree} include wild cherry or black cherry or rum cherry, choke cherry, bird cherry or fire cherry or pin cherry, sour cherry, Mahaleb cherry, and Cornelian-cherry. Cherry trees have red or black cherries, are short trees or shrubs, and have white flowers.
leaves
Cherries, elms, lindens, and many other trees have leaves all along twig.
berries
Other berry trees {wild berry tree} are wild plum, dwarf cornel or bunchberry, silky cornel or kinnikinnick, sweet haw or black haw, sweet viburnum, nannyberry, southern arrowwood, and maple-leaved viburnum. Viburnum is usually shrub, has opposite leaves, has cap-like five-petal white-flower clusters on eight stalks on one twig, and has small blue drupes. Maple, ash, and viburnum leaves always grow in pairs. Arrowwoods like wet ground.
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Description of Outline of Knowledge Database
Date Modified: 2022.0225