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形容草莓的句子用英文

时间:2019-02-09 20:17

怎样用英文介绍草莓

This is a strawberry. 这是草莓。

The color is red. 颜色是红色。

There are many black seeds on it. 在上面有好多黑色的籽。

It's very delicious to eat. 吃起来很美味。

So I like them. 所以我喜欢草莓。

描写草莓外形的句子英语

English 英语math 数学Chinese 语文physics 物理chemistry P.E. 体育science 科学art 美术,History 历史 music Biology 生物 Geography 地理French 法语polity 政治computer 机 五年级的。

应该学了吧。

但些已经是最最基础的了,希望能帮到你。

英语里关于草莓的谚语句子有什么

1.这是因为桌子的振动幅度比较小,人的肉眼难以观察。

2.你可以在桌子上洒一些米粒,然后拍桌子,这些米粒会跳动起来,说明桌子在振动。

通过这种方法,能够将不容易观察到的现象,转化为我们能看到的。

用英语描写草莓

strawberry The strawberry (Fragaria) is a genus of plants in the family Rosaceae, and the fruit of these plants. There are more than 20 named species and many hybrids and cultivars. The most common strawberries grown commercially are cultivars of the Garden strawberry, a Fragaria × ananassa hybrid. Strawberries are a valuable source of vitamin C.MorphologyThe strawberry is an accessory fruit; that is, the fleshy part is derived not from the ovaries (which are the seeds, actually achenes) but from the peg at the bottom of the hypanthium that held the ovaries. So from a technical standpoint, the seeds are the actual fruits of the plant, and the flesh of the strawberry is a vegetable. It is greenish-white as it develops and in most species turns red when ripe.The rosette growth of the plants are a well-known characteristic. Most species send out long slender runners that produce a new bud at the extremity. The leaves typically have three leaflets, but the number of leaflets may be five or one.While the flower has the typical rosaceous structure, the fruit is very peculiar, but it may be understood by the contrast it presents with the rose hip of the rose. In a rose the top of the flower-stalk expands as it grows into a vase-shaped cavity, the hip, within which are concealed the true fruits or seed-vessels. In the rose the extremity of the floral axis is concave and bears the carpels in its interior. In the strawberry, the floral axis, instead of being concave, swells out into a fleshy, dome-shaped or flattened mass in which the carpels or true fruits, commonly called pips or seeds, are more or less embedded but never wholly concealed. A ripe strawberry in fact may be aptly compared to the fruit of a rose turned inside out.Strawberries are now out of season.ClassificationThere are more than 20 Fragaria species worldwide. Key to the classification of strawberry species is recognizing that they vary in the number of chromosomes. There are seven basic types of chromosomes that they all have in common. However, they exhibit different polyploidy. Some species are diploid, having two sets of the seven chromosomes (14 chromosomes total). Others are tetraploid (four sets, 28 chromosomes total), hexaploid (six sets, 42 chromosomes total), octoploid (eight sets, 56 chromosomes total), or decaploid (ten sets, 70 chromosomes total).As a rough rule (with exceptions), strawberry species with more chromosomes tend to be more robust and produce larger plants with larger berries (Darrow).EtymologyThe name is derived from Old English streawberige which is a compound of streaw meaning straw and berige meaning berry. The reason for this is unclear. It may derive from the strawlike appearance of the runners, or from an obsolete denotation of straw, meaning chaff, referring to the scattered appearance of the achenes.Interestingly, in other Germanic countries there is a tradition of collecting wild strawberries by threading them on straws. In those countries people find straw-berry to be an easy word to learn considering their association with straws.There is an alternative theory that the name derives from the Anglo-Saxon verb for strew (meaning to spread around) which was streabergen (Strea means strew and Bergen means berry or fruit) and thence to streberie, straiberie, strauberie, straubery, strauberry, and finally, strawberry, the word which we use today. The name might have come from the fact that the fruit and various runners appear strewn along the ground.Popular etymology has it that it comes from gardeners' practice of mulching strawberries with straw to protect the fruits from rot (a pseudoetymology that can be found in non-linguistic sources such as the Old Farmer's Almanac 2005). However, there is no evidence that the Anglo-Saxons ever grew strawberries, and even less that they knew of this practice.

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