![]() ![]() ![]() Containing juice, the sarcotesta is formed as a thin membrane derived from the epidermal cells of the seeds. Membranes of the mesocarp are organized as nonsymmetric chambers that contain seeds inside sarcotestas, which are embedded without attachment to the mesocarp. Red-purple in color, the pomegranate fruit husk has two parts: an outer, hard pericarp, and an inner, spongy mesocarp (white "albedo"), which comprises the fruit inner wall where seeds attach. It still persists however amongst the fruit & vegetable stalls at the famous Moore Street open-air market, in central Dublin. Pomegranates were colloquially called 'wineapples' or 'wine-apples' in Ireland, although this term has somewhat fallen out of use lately. The modern French term for pomegranate, grenade, has given its name to the military grenade. This derivation may have originated from pomum granatum, describing the color of pomegranate pulp, or from granum, referring to "red dye, cochineal". Garnet derives from Old French grenat by metathesis, from Medieval Latin granatum as used in a different meaning "of a dark red color". This is a folk etymology, confusing the Latin granatus with the name of the Spanish city of Granada, which derives from Arabic. Possibly stemming from the old French word for the fruit, pomme-grenade, the pomegranate was known in early English as "apple of Grenada"-a term which today survives only in heraldic blazons. The name pomegranate derives from medieval Latin pōmum "apple" and grānātum "seeded". A pomegranate tree in an illustration for the Tacuinum Sanitatis, made in Lombardy, late 14th century ( Biblioteca Casanatense, Rome) ![]()
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