Olives

skiP.E.I.

Active member
Are they a fruit or a vegetable? This problem just occured to me a little while ago while I was making pizza. I realized I had no idea whether olives are a fruit or veg. They have a pit and grow on a tree, so it sounds like a fruit, but it seems like they should be a vegetable. Does anyone know? I guess I could just google it, but I thought it was too good a question to keep to myself.
 
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the tree; for its edible fruit, see Olive (fruit);

 
hmm well all vegetables have seeds so ur therory is wrong. sry

if they didnt have seeds they couldnt reproduce and make bebe trees
 
Nope the plant has seeds but the vegtable it's self dosen't. Think about carrots and taters. Where are the seeds? There on the plant.
 
The term fruit has many different meanings depending on context. In botany, a fruit is the ripened ovary—together with seeds—of a flowering plant.

Vegetable is a term which generally refers to an edible part of a plant. The definition is traditional rather than scientific and is somewhat arbitrary and subjective. All parts of herbaceous plants eaten as food by humans, whole or in part, are normally considered vegetables. Mushrooms, though belonging to the biological kingdom Fungi, are also commonly considered vegetables.[citation needed] In general, vegetables are thought of as being savory, and not sweet, although there are many exceptions. Nuts, grains, herbs, spices and culinary fruits (see below) are normally not considered vegetables.

Since “vegetable” is not a botanical term, there is no contradiction in referring to a plant part as a fruit while also being considered a vegetable. Given this general rule of thumb, vegetables can also include leaves (lettuce), stems (asparagus), roots (carrots), flowers (broccoli), bulbs (garlic), seeds (peas and beans) and botanical fruits such as cucumbers, squash, pumpkins, and capsicums (bell peppers). Botanically, fruits are reproductive organs (ripened ovaries containing one or many seeds), while vegetables are vegetative organs which sustain the plant.

The question "is it a fruit, or is it a vegetable?" has even found its way into the United States Supreme Court, which ruled unanimously in Nix v. Hedden, 1893, that a tomato is a vegetable for the purposes of 1883 Tariff Act, although botanically, a tomato is a fruit.

Commercial production of vegetables is a branch of horticulture called olericulture.

 
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