Comment by philipswood
19 days ago
Yes, tomato's ARE actually a fruit.
But really!?
I'll keep calling it in nice round powers of two, thank you very much.
19 days ago
Yes, tomato's ARE actually a fruit.
But really!?
I'll keep calling it in nice round powers of two, thank you very much.
Even more weirdly, pumpkins are berries. But that’s a botanical definition. In the kitchen they (and tomatoes) are classified as vegetables.
Same with cucumbers and a lot more "plants" :-)
Yes. Tomatoes are a fruit because the science says so. That non-scientific people call it something else does not change facts.
Depends if you're using the botanical definition or the (more common) culinary definition[0].
I would argue fruit and fruit are two words, one created semasiologically and the other created onomasiologically. Had we chosen a different pronunciation for one of those words, there would be no confusion about what fruits are.
[0] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit#Botanical_vs._culinary
Yup. Though rather than say "fruit and fruit" are two words, or focusing on "definitions" (which tend to morph over time anyway), I think the more straightforward and typical approach is to just recognize that the same word can have different meanings in different contexts.
This is such a basic and universal part of language, it is a mystery to me why something so transparently clueless as "actually, tomato is a fruit" persists.
Definitions that don't reflect peoples usage are not very useful definition.
Just because someone is wrong doesn't mean we need to reinforce their error.
Context matters…
Knowledge is understanding that tomatoes are a fruit. Wisdom is understanding that they don't belong in a fruit salad.
Or...
Knowledge is understanding that ketchup is tomato jelly. Wisdom is refraining from putting it on your peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
> Knowledge is understanding that ketchup is tomato jelly
How is it a jelly? It lacks any defining feature of jelly.
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