Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It is in the same genus as the chirimoya and the same family as the pawpaw.
Chirimoya: a fruit native to the subtropical regions of the Andes mountains, it is widely consumed and produced.
Trees that give fruit are: avocado, chirimoya, walnut, plum, capulín, tejocote etc.
Cherimoya (chirimoya)
The flora in the central Sea Yungas region is mainly composed by the lucuma and chirimoya trees, the casuarin and others.
In Peru, Chile, Ecuador and Colombia the fruit is commonly known as chirimoya (spelled accordingly with the Spanish language rules).
Oranges, pine- apples, bananas, strawberries, lemons, limes, mangoes, guavas, melons, and a rare and curious luxury called the chirimoya, which is deliciousness itself.
Chirimoya Triste Burrito Ana, yo no soy tu principe azul Hola... Cómo Estás!
Thus, it is known as the "National Capital of the Avocado and Chirimoya", Chirimoya is a fruit with a green shell and white meat.
People cultivate native plants like the Canistel or eggfruit tree the lúcuma tree, the cherimoya or chirimoya, the guava or guayabo and the avocado or palta.
They also grow maize, Colocasia, Xanthosoma, beans, sugarcane, hot peppers, chirimoya, tomato, tamarind, mango, achiote, borojo, naranjilla, papaya, inga, avocado, peach palm, and other useful plants.
The most famous are mangos,avocados,nispola and chirimoya but it is also possible to find papaya,guava,litchees,kiwi,figs and opuntia ficus-indica which can be also find as ice cream or jams in several coffee shops.
Their biggest hit was "Chirimoya" (from their first album, The Shape (Por Amor al Arte)), where they mimicked voices from the cartoons Pixie & Dixie, Tweety, and Roadrunner.
He continues to farm a small parcel of land in the hills above town, growing the chirimoya fruit, known in English as soursop, in hopes of selling it on the South American mainland, more than 2,000 miles away, or in Tahiti.
The cherimoya, also spelled chirimoya, is the fruit of the species Annona cherimola, which generally is thought to be native to the Andes, although an alternative hypothesis proposes Central America as the origin of cherimoya because many of its wild relatives occur in this area.