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USA TODAY Super Bowl 59 Preview

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Super Bowl 59 Preview)
Sat Feb 1 13:35:08 2025

Date: Sat, 1 Feb 2025 19:35:07 +0100
From: "Super Bowl 59 Preview" <support@simplejointpain.click>
Reply-To: "Super Bowl 59 Preview" <service@simplejointpain.click>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>

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USA TODAY  Super Bowl 59 Preview

Please click below for a complimentary copy of USA TODAY Super Bowl Preview
Super Bowl
http://simplejointpain.click/l0w5D_M0a63I9JFYDnprVdvgCXqCNTMyde9RFDe_mEQvQy2FUQ

http://simplejointpain.click/ovC2J5V_h7wxjpvk1TyUM9c9bqvb-wA7om5_gdHcBODp-qJswQ

e Latin word baca or bacca (plural baccae) was originally used for "any small round fruit". Andrea Caesalpinus (1519–1603) classified plants into trees and herbs, further dividing them by properties of their flowers and fruit. He did not make the modern distinction between "fruits" and "seeds", calling hard structures like nuts semina or seeds. A fleshy fruit was called a pericarpium. For Caesalpinus, a true bacca or berry was a pericarpium derived from a flower with a superior ovary; one derived from a flower with an inferior ovary was called a pomum.

In 1751, Carl Linnaeus wrote Philosophia Botanica, considered to be the first textbook of descriptive systematic botany. He used eight different terms for fruits, one of which was bacca or berry, distinguished from other types of fruit such as drupa (drupe) and pomum (pome). A bacca was defined as "pericarpium farctum evalve, semina ceteroquin nuda continens", meaning "unvalved solid pericarp, containing otherwise naked seeds". The adjective "farctus" here has the sense of "solid with tissue softer than the outside; stuffed". A berry or bacca was distinguished from a drupe and a pome, both of which also had an unvalved solid pericarp; a drupe also contained a nut (nux) and a pome a capsule (capsula), rather than the berry's naked seeds. Linnaeus' use of bacca and pomum was thus significantly different from that of Caesalpinus. Botanists continue to differ on how fruit should be classified.

Joseph Gaertner published a two-volume work, De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum (on the fruits and seeds of plants) between 1788 and 1792. In addition to Linnaeus' eight terms, he introduced seven more, including pepo for the berry-like fruits of cucurbits. A pepo was distinguished by being a fleshy berry with the seeds distant from the axis, and so nearer the fruit wall (i.e. by having "parietal placentation" in modern terminology). Nicaise Auguste Desvaux in 1813 used the terms hesperidium and amphisarca as further subdivisions of berries. A hesperidium, called by others bacca corticata (berry with a cortex), had separate internal compartments ("loges" in the original French) and a separable membraneous epicarp or skin. An amphisarca was described as woody on the outside and fleshy on the inside. "Hesperidium" remains in general use, but "amphisarca" is rarely use

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<b style="font-size:14px;font-family:Arial;">Please click below for a complimentary copy of USA TODAY Super Bowl Preview</b><br />
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<div style="visibility:hidden;">e Latin word baca or bacca (plural baccae) was originally used for &quot;any small round fruit&quot;. Andrea Caesalpinus (1519&ndash;1603) classified plants into trees and herbs, further dividing them by properties of their flowers and fruit. He did not make the modern distinction between &quot;fruits&quot; and &quot;seeds&quot;, calling hard structures like nuts semina or seeds. A fleshy fruit was called a pericarpium. For Caesalpinus, a true bacca or berry was a pericarpium derived from a flower with a superior ovary; one derived from a flower with an inferior ovary was called a pomum. In 1751, Carl Linnaeus wrote Philosophia Botanica, considered to be the first textbook of descriptive systematic botany. He used eight different terms for fruits, one of which was bacca or berry, distinguished from other types of fruit such as drupa (drupe) and pomum (pome). A bacca was defined as &quot;pericarpium farctum evalve, semina ceteroquin nuda continens&quot;, meaning &quot;unvalved solid pericarp, containing otherwise naked seeds&quot;. The adjective &quot;farctus&quot; here has the sense of &quot;solid with tissue softer than the outside; stuffed&quot;. A berry or bacca was distinguished from a drupe and a pome, both of which also had an unvalved solid pericarp; a drupe also contained a nut (nux) and a pome a capsule (capsula), rather than the berry&#39;s naked seeds. Linnaeus&#39; use of bacca and pomum was thus significantly different from that of Caesalpinus. Botanists continue to differ on how fruit should be classified. Joseph Gaertner published a two-volume work, De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum (on the fruits and seeds of plants) between 1788 and 1792. In addition to Linnaeus&#39; eight terms, he introduced seven more, including pepo for the berry-like fruits of cucurbits. A pepo was distinguished by being a fleshy berry with the seeds distant from the axis, and so nearer the fruit wall (i.e. by having &quot;parietal placentation&quot; in modern terminology). Nicaise Auguste Desvaux in 1813 used the terms hesperidium and amphisarca as further subdivisions of berries. A hesperidium, called by others bacca corticata (berry with a cortex), had separate internal compartments (&quot;loges&quot; in the original French) and a separable membraneous epicarp or skin. An amphisarca was described as woody on the outside and fleshy on the inside. &quot;Hesperidium&quot; remains in general use, but &quot;amphisarca&quot; is rarely use</div>
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