bullace grape
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A type of grape: A specific variety of grape, characterized by its dull purple color, native to the southern United States.
Usage
- This term is a compound noun that functions as a single unit to name a specific botanical variety. It is used in contexts related to horticulture, viticulture, and regional flora.
- It is typically used as a countable noun (e.g., , ).
Examples
- The bullace grape is known for its resilience in the hot climate of the Southeast.
- Local winemakers sometimes use bullace grapes for producing unique regional wines.
- He collected several clusters of the wild bullace grape.
Advanced Usage
- The term is primarily technical or descriptive. In everyday conversation, one might simply refer to "a type of purple grape from the South" unless specificity is required.
Variants and Related Words
- Muscadine: A broader category of grapevine species () native to the southeastern United States, to which the bullace grape belongs.
- Scuppernong: A specific, well-known variety of muscadine grape, often bronze or green in color, contrasted with the purple bullace.
Synonyms
- Southern muscadine
- Dull-purple muscadine
Notes on Meaning
- The term specifically denotes the fruit's dull purple hue, distinguishing it from other muscadine varieties like the green or bronze scuppernong.
- Its primary meaning is botanical, referring to the fruit itself, not the vine (which would be a "bullace grape vine").
Noun
- dull-purple grape of southern United States