Is a potato a friut??!
Answers: is it?? and why??
*stares*
Its a vegetable.. its a root vegetable.. the plant is green..
My family used to grow potatoes, carrots, corn, guava.. But not anymore because we moved houses and have a cement back yard..
Fruit? who told you that? *giggles*
nooit's a veggie most fruits are juicy anyway.a potato is dry n rusty n stuff.
it is a vegetable, more specifically a "tuber".
a vegetable because a fruit is a type of food that has seeds so since a potato doesnt have seeds it's considered a vegetable.
No seeds, so it's a vegetable.
It is a root
no, potato is a vegetable, its the root of a plant.
it's a root vegetable or tuber
NO WHY WOULD YOU THINK THAT!!! RAWR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...
no it is a type of veggie.
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. In many species, the fruit incorporates the ripened ovary and the surrounding tissues. Fruits are the means by which flowering plants disseminate seeds. In cuisine, when discussing fruit as food, the term usually refers to those plant fruits that are sweet and fleshy, examples of which include plums, apples and oranges. However, a great many common vegetables, as well as nuts and grains, are the fruit of that plant species. No single terminology really fits the enormous variety that is found among plant fruits. The cuisine terminology for fruits is inexact and will remain so. The term false fruit (pseudocarp, accessory fruit) is sometimes applied to a fruit like the fig (a multiple-accessory fruit; see below) or to a plant structure that resembles a fruit but is not derived from a flower or flowers. Some gymnosperms, such as yew, have fleshy arils that resemble fruits and some junipers have berry-like, fleshy cones. The term "fruit" has also been inaccurately applied to the seed-containing female cones of many conifers
Vegetable !
I think it is a vegetable....
no b/c it grows underground and its like a root of the plant like carrots and turnips