Rutaceae vs Sapote - What's the difference?
rutaceae | sapote |
The soft, edible fruit of various South American trees, including the sapodilla.
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=June 28, author=John Anderson, title=His Weird Side: That’s Where the Fun Is, work=New York Times
, passage=Besides, the theater gives him a rush that can only be equaled by, perhaps, the healthy fruiting of a white sapote . }}
# Sapotaceae species:
## Manilkara zapota , sapodilla, naseberry, native to Mexico, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Belize, and possibly El Salvador.
## , yellow sapote, native to Mexico and Central America.
## Pouteria sapota , mamey sapote, from southern Mexico to northern South America.
## , green sapote, native to lowland southern Mexico.
# Ebenaceae species:
## , black sapote, from eastern Mexico south to Colombia.
## , chapote, is native to the lower Rio Grande valley region in Texas and Mexico.
# Rutaceae species:
## , white sapote, native to northern and central Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Guatemala.
As a proper noun rutaceae
is .As a noun sapote is
the soft, edible fruit of various south american trees, including the sapodilla.rutaceae
Not English
Rutaceae has no English definition. It may be misspelled.sapote
English
Noun
(en noun)citation