Dictionary Definition
cherry adj : having any of numerous bright or
strong colors reminiscent of the color of blood or cherries or
tomatoes or rubies [syn: red, reddish, ruddy, blood-red,
carmine, cerise, cherry-red,
crimson, ruby, ruby-red, scarlet]
Noun
1 wood of any of various cherry trees especially
the black cherry
2 any of numerous trees and shrubs producing a
small fleshy round fruit with a single hard stone; many also
produce a valuable hardwood [syn: cherry
tree]
3 fruit with a single hard stone
4 a red the color of ripe cherries [syn: cerise, cherry
red]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Cherry
English
Etymology
From etyl grc κερασός.Pronunciation
- /ˈʧɐɹi/
- Rhymes: -ɛri
Noun
Usage notes
Cherry includes, but is not limited to, the following species, of the genus Prunus: avium, cerasus, mahaleb, mazzard, pennsylvannica, pumila, serotina, serrulata, and virginiana. Prunus also includes plums.Translations
fruit
- Arabic: كرز
- Bosnian: trešnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Breton: kerez collective noun kerezenn singular f
- Bulgarian: череша (čereša) (sweet cherry), вишна (višna) (sour cherry)
- Catalan: cirera
- Chinese: 樱桃
- Croatian: trešnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Czech: třešně
- Danish: kirsebær
- Dutch: kers , kriek
- Esperanto: ĉerizo, merizo, dolĉa ĉerizo, grioto
- Estonian: kirss
- Finnish: kirsikka
- French: cerise
- Galician: cereixa
- German: Kirsche
- Greek: ,
- Hebrew: דובדבן (duvdevan)
- Hungarian: cseresznye
- Icelandic: kirsuber
- Ido: cerizo
- Interlingua: ceresia
- Irish: silín
- Italian: ciliegia
- Japanese: チェリー (cherī) (dark cherry), さくらんぼ (sakuranbo) (Japanese cherry)
- Korean: 버찌 (bŏ-jji)
- Kurdish: gêlaz, گێلاس
- Latin: cerasum
- Lithuanian: vyšnia
- Maltese: cirasa
- Norwegian: kirsebær
- Polish: czereśnia (sweet cherry), wiśnia (sour cherry)
- Portuguese: cereja
- Romanian: cireaşă (sweet cherry), vişină (sour cherry)
- Russian: черешня (čerešnǎ) (sweet cherry), вишня (višnǎ) (sour cherry)
- Scottish Gaelic: siris(t)
- Serbian:
- Sicilian: cirasa
- Slovak: čerešňa
- Slovene: češnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Spanish: cereza, guinda
- Swedish: körsbär , bigarrå
- Tamil: சேலாப்பழம்
- Thai: เชอร์รี่
- Turkish: kiraz
tree
- Bosnian: trešnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Breton: kerezenn -ed p
- Bulgarian: череша (čereša) (sweet cherry), вишна (višna) (sour cherry)
- Catalan: cirerer
- Chinese: 櫻桃樹
- Croatian: trešnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Czech: třešeň
- Dutch: kerselaar , kriekenboom
- Esperanto: ĉerizarbo, ĉerizujo
- Estonian: kirsipuu
- Finnish: kirsikkapuu
- French: cerisier
- Galician: cerdeira
- Greek: ,
- Hebrew: עץ דובדבן ('etz duvdevan)
- Icelandic: kirsuberjatré
- Interlingua: ceresiero
- Irish: crann silíní
- Italian: ciliegio
- Japanese: 桜 (sakura)
- Kurdish:
- Latin: cerasus
- Lithuanian: vyšnia
- Portuguese: cerejeira
- Russian: вишня (višnǎ) , сакура (sakura) (japanese cherry)
- Serbian:
- Sicilian: cirasaru
- Slovene: češnja (sweet cherry), višnja (sour cherry)
- Spanish: cerezo (Prunus avium), guindo (Prunus cerasus)
- Swedish: körsbärsträd, körsbär
- Turkish: kiraz ağacı
wood
- Breton: kerezeg -i / -où p
- Dutch: kersenhout
- Greek: κερασιά [ce̞raˈsça]
- Hebrew: עץ דובדבן ('etz duvdevan)
- Icelandic: kirsuberjaviður
- Russian: вишня
- Swedish: körsbärsträ, körsbär
- Turkish: kiraz kerestesi
color
Usage notes
Cherry includes, but is not limited to, the following species, of the genus prunus: avium, cerasus, mahaleb, mazzard, pennsylvannica, pumila, serotina, serrulata, and virginiana. Prunus also includes plums.Adjective
- Containing or having the taste of cherries.
- Of a bright red colour.
- In excellent condition; mint
condition.
- 2003, John Morgan Wilson,
Blind Eye, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0312309198, p. 108
- A few years earlier, I'd restored my ’65 Mustang convertible to cherry condition—fire engine red, with matching tuck-and-roll—and I wasn't surprised that it drew attention.
- 2003, John Morgan Wilson,
Blind Eye, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0312309198, p. 108
Translations
flavour
- Czech: třešňový
- Dutch: met kersensmaak, kersen-
- Esperanto: ĉeriza
- Lithuanian: vyšninis
- Polish: wiśniowy
- Russian: вишневый (višnevyĭ)
- Swedish: med körsbärssmak
colour
- Dutch: kersen-
- Esperanto: ĉerizkolora
- Lithuanian: vyšninis
- Portuguese: cereja
- Russian: вишневый (višnevyĭ)
- Swedish: körsbärsfärgad
Derived terms
- Barbados cherry
- black cherry
- cherry birch
- cherry bomb
- cherry brandy
- cherry laurel
- cherry picker
- cherry pie
- cherry plum
- cherry red
- cherry tomato
- cherry-pick
- cherrystone
- cherrywood
- chokecherry
- cornelian cherry
- fire cherry
- ground cherry
- heart cherry
- Jerusalem cherry
- Mahaleb cherry
- maraschino cherry
- mazzard cherry
- pin cherry
- pop someone's cherry
- sand cherry
- sour cherry
- sweet cherry
- :wild cherry
- winter cherry
Related terms
See also
Extensive Definition
The word cherry refers to a fleshy fruit (drupe) that contains a single
stony seed. The cherry belongs to the family Rosaceae, genus
Prunus,
along with almonds,
peaches, plums, apricots and bird
cherries. The subgenus, Cerasus, is distinguished by having the
flowers in small corymbs of several together (not
singly, nor in racemes),
and by having a smooth fruit with only a weak groove or none along
one side. The subgenus is native to the temperate regions of the
Northern
Hemisphere, with two species in America, three in
Europe, and
the remainder in Asia. The word
"cherry" comes from the French
word "cerise", which comes in turn from the Latin words cerasum
and Cerasus.
Background
The cherry is generally understood to have been brought to Rome from Persia. Giresun was known to the ancient Greeks as Choerades or Pharnacia and later as Kerasous or Cerasus, < Kerason < Kerasounta < Kerasus "horn" (for peninsula) in Greek + ounta "Greek toponomical suffix".[1] The name later mutated into Kerasunt (sometimes written Kérasounde or Kerassunde).The English word cherry, French cerise, Spanish
cereza, and Southern Italian dialect cerasa (standard Italian
ciliegia) all come from Classical Greek κέρασος 'cherry', which has
been identified with Cerasus. The cherry was first exported to
Europe from Cerasus in Roman times.
The Wild Cherry
(P. avium) has given rise to the Sweet Cherry to which most cherry
cultivars belong, and
the Sour
Cherry (P. cerasus) is used mainly for cooking. Both species
originate in Europe and western
Asia; they do
not cross-pollinate each other. The other species, although having
edible fruit, are not grown extensively for consumption, except in
northern regions where the two main species will not grow. Given
the high costs of production, from irrigation, sprays and labour
costs, in addition to their proneness to damage from rain and hail,
the cherry is relatively expensive. Nonetheless, there is high
demand for the fruit.
Major commercial cherry orchards in Europe extend
from the Iberian
peninsula east to Asia Minor,
and to a smaller extent may also be grown in the Baltic
States and southern Scandinavia. In
the United
States, most sweet cherries for fresh use are grown in California and
Washington.
Important sweet cherry cultivars include 'Bing',
'Brooks', 'Tulare', 'King', and 'Rainier'.
Oregon and
Michigan
provide light-coloured 'Royal Ann' ('Napoleon'; alternately 'Queen
Anne') cherries for the maraschino
cherry process. Most sour (also called tart) cherries are grown
in four states bordering the
Great Lakes, in Michigan (the
largest producers of cherries among the states), New York,
Pennsylvania,
and Wisconsin,
however, native and non-native cherries grow well in Canada (Ontario and
British
Columbia) as well. Sour cherries include Nanking and Evans
Cherry. Traverse
City, Michigan claims to be the "Cherry Capital of the World",
hosting a National
Cherry Festival and making the world's largest cherry pie. The
specific region of Northern Michigan that is known the world over
for tart cherry production is referred to as the "Traverse Bay"
region. Farms in this region grown many varieties of cherries and
companies like Traverse Bay Farms sell the fruit of the region.
Likewise in Australia the
New
South Wales town of Young
is famous nationwide as the "Cherry Capital of Australia", and
also hosts the internationally famous National Cherry Festival.
Popular varieties include the 'Montmorency', 'Morello', 'North
Star', 'Early Richmond', 'Titans' and 'Lamberts'.
Cherries have a very long growing season and can
grow anywhere, including the great cold of the tundra. In Australia
they are usually at their peak around Christmas time,
in southern Europe in June, in America in June, and in the UK in
mid July, always in the summer season. In many parts of North
America they are among the first tree fruits to ripen; hence the
colloquial term "cherry" to mean "new" or "the first", e.g. "in
cherry condition".
Annual world production (as of 2003) of
domesticated cherries is about 45698 million tonnes, of which a third are sour
cherries. Around 75 percent of world production originates in
Europe.
Besides the fruit, cherries also have attractive
flowers, and they are
commonly planted for their flower display in spring; several of the
Asian cherries are particularly noted for their flower displays.
The Japanese sakura in
particular are a national symbol celebrated in the yearly Hanami festival.
Many flowering cherry cultivars (known as 'ornamental cherries')
have the stamens and
pistils replaced by
additional petals
("double" flowers), so are sterile and do not bear fruit. They are
grown purely for their flowers and decorative value. The most
common of these sterile cherries is the cultivar 'Kanzan'. Cherry
trees provide food for the caterpillars of several
Lepidoptera.
See
List of Lepidoptera which feed on Prunus.
Medical benefits
Cherries contain anthocyanins, the red
pigment in berries. Cherry anthocyanins have been shown to reduce
pain and inflammation in rats. Anthocyanins are also potent
antioxidants under active research for a variety of potential
health benefits.
See also
References
Photo gallery
External links
cherry in Tosk Albanian: Kirsche (Frucht)
cherry in Arabic: كرز
cherry in Bulgarian: Череша
cherry in Czech: Třešně
cherry in Danish: Kirsebær (frugt)
cherry in German: Kirsche (Frucht)
cherry in Modern Greek (1453-): Κερασιά
(φυτό)
cherry in Spanish: Cerasus
cherry in Esperanto: Ĉerizo
cherry in Basque: Gereziondo
cherry in Persian: گیلاس
cherry in French: Cerise
cherry in Galician: Cereixa
cherry in Indonesian: Ceri
cherry in Italian: Ciliegia
cherry in Hebrew: דובדבן
cherry in Georgian: ალუბალი
cherry in Haitian: Seriz
cherry in Latin: Cerasus (pomum)
cherry in Lithuanian: Vyšnia
cherry in Hungarian: Cseresznye
cherry in Malayalam: ചെറി
cherry in Dutch: Kers
cherry in Japanese: サクランボ
cherry in Neapolitan: Cerasa
cherry in Polish: Wiśnia
cherry in Portuguese: Cerejeira
cherry in Russian: Вишня
cherry in Simple English: Cherry
cherry in Slovenian: Češnja
cherry in Finnish: Cerasus
cherry in Swedish: Körsbär
cherry in Walloon: Ceréjhe
cherry in Samogitian: Vīšnė
cherry in Chinese:
樱桃