Why do they call a grapefruit a grapefruit when it shape like a orange?!


Question:

Why do they call a grapefruit a grapefruit when it shape like a orange?


Answers:
Maybe it is the other way around and an orange is shaped like a grapefruit. In which case why do they call if an orange?

[Q] From Tom Williams: “Why is a grapefruit called that when it looks nothing like a grape?”

[A] This question is indeed a bit of a puzzle, but the grapefruit is a strange plant even without the problem of its name. It appeared in Barbados in the middle of the eighteenth century as a natural cross between the orange and the pummelo or pomelo. The latter is also known by its Dutch name pompelmoose and as shaddock, because a Captain Shaddock of the East India Company brought it halfway around the world from the East Indies late in the seventeenth century.

The grapefruit was first described in 1750 by the Reverend Griffith Hughes and was then and often afterwards called the forbidden fruit, because it was seized upon by those searching for the identity of the original tree of good and evil in the Garden of Eden. John Lunan, in whose botanical work of 1814 about Jamaica, Hortus Jamaicensis, the word grapefruit first appeared in English, said of it: “There is a variety known by the name of grape-fruit, on account of its resemblance in flavour to the grape; this fruit is not near so large as the shaddock”. Mr Lunan had either never tasted one, or grapefruit of the period were sweeter than they are now, or he was suffering from sour grapes.

It’s certain his idea about the name was wrong. It turns out the grapefruit was really so called because it grows in groups that when small, green and unripe look to a vivid imagination a bit like a bunch of grapes.


Source-http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-gra3...

A relative newcomer to the citrus clan, the grapefruit was originally believed to be a spontaneous sport of the pummelo (q.v.). James MacFayden, in his Flora of Jamaica, in 1837, separated the grapefruit from the pummelo, giving it the botanical name, Citrus paradisi Macf. About 1948, citrus specialists began to suggest that the grapefruit was not a sport of the pummelo but an accidental hybrid between the pummelo and the orange. The botanical name has been altered to reflect this view, and it is now generally accepted as Citrus X paradisi.

When this new fruit was adopted into cultivation and the name grapefruit came into general circulation, American horticulturists viewed that title as so inappropriate that they endeavored to have it dropped in favor of "pomelo". However, it was difficult to avoid confusion with the pummelo, and the name grapefruit prevailed, and is in international use except in Spanish-speaking areas where the fruit is called toronja. In 1962, Florida Citrus Mutual proposed changing the name to something more appealing to consumers in order to stimulate greater sales. There were so many protests from the public against a name change that the idea was abandoned.




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