Found 2 items, similar to Prunus Americana.
English → English (WordNet)
Definition: Prunus americana
Prunus americana
n : wild plum trees of eastern and central North America having
red-orange fruit with yellow flesh [syn:
American red plum
,
August plum,
goose plum]
English → English (gcide)
Definition: Prunus Americana
Plum
\Plum\, n. [AS. pl[=u]me, fr. L. prunum; akin to Gr. ?, ?.
Cf.
Prune a dried plum.]
[1913 Webster]
1. (Bot.) The edible drupaceous fruit of the
Prunus domestica
, and of several other species of
Prunus;
also, the tree itself, usually called
plum tree.
[1913 Webster]
The bullace, the damson, and the numerous varieties
of plum, of our gardens, although growing into
thornless trees, are believed to be varieties of the
blackthorn, produced by long cultivation. --G.
Bentham.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Two or three hundred varieties of plums derived from
the
Prunus domestica are described; among them the
greengage, the
Orleans, the
purple gage, or
Reine Claude Violette, and the
German prune, are
some of the best known.
[1913 Webster]
Note: Among the true plums are;
Beach plum, the
Prunus maritima, and its crimson or
purple globular drupes,
Bullace plum. See
Bullace.
Chickasaw plum, the American
Prunus Chicasa, and its
round red drupes.
Orleans plum, a dark reddish purple plum of medium size,
much grown in England for sale in the markets.
Wild plum of America,
Prunus Americana, with red or
yellow fruit, the original of the
Iowa plum and several
other varieties.
[1913 Webster] Among plants called plum, but of other
genera than
Prunus, are;
Australian plum,
Cargillia arborea and
Cargillia australis
, of the same family with the persimmon.
Blood plum, the West African
H[ae]matostaphes Barteri.
Cocoa plum, the Spanish nectarine. See under
Nectarine.
Date plum. See under
Date.
Gingerbread plum, the West African
Parinarium macrophyllum
.
Gopher plum, the Ogeechee lime.
Gray plum,
Guinea plum. See under
Guinea.
Indian plum, several species of
Flacourtia.
[1913 Webster]
2. A grape dried in the sun; a raisin.
[1913 Webster]
3. A handsome fortune or property; formerly, in cant
language, the sum of [pounds]100,000 sterling; also, the
person possessing it.
[1913 Webster]
4. Something likened to a plum in desirableness; a good or
choice thing of its kind, as among appointments,
positions, parts of a book, etc.; as, the mayor rewarded
his cronies with cushy plums, requiring little work for
handsome pay
[Webster 1913 Suppl. +PJC]
5. A color resembling that of a plum; a slightly grayish deep
purple, varying somewhat in its red or blue tint.
[PJC]
Plum bird,
Plum budder (Zo["o]l.), the European
bullfinch.
Plum gouger (Zo["o]l.), a weevil, or curculio (
Coccotorus scutellaris
), which destroys plums. It makes round holes
in the pulp, for the reception of its eggs. The larva
bores into the stone and eats the kernel.
Plum weevil (Zo["o]l.), an American weevil which is very
destructive to plums, nectarines, cherries, and many other
stone fruits. It lays its eggs in crescent-shaped
incisions made with its jaws. The larva lives upon the
pulp around the stone. Called also
turk, and
plum curculio
. See Illust. under
Curculio.
[1913 Webster]