blue-black berry similar to blueberries and bilberries of the eastern United States any of several shrubs of the genus Gaylussacia bearing small berries resembling blueberries any of various dark-fruited as distinguished from blue-fruited blueberries
huckleberries a small dark-blue North American fruit that grows on a bush. Small, fruit-bearing, branching shrub of the genus Gaylussacia, in the heath family, resembling in habit the English bilberry, to which it is closely related. It bears fleshy fruit with 10 nutlike seeds, differing in this respect from the blueberry. The common huckleberry of the northern U.S. is G. baccata, also called black, or highbush, huckleberry. The florists', or evergreen, huckleberry is actually a blueberry. The red huckleberry of the southern U.S. is commonly called the southern cranberry
The edible black or dark blue fruit of several species of the American genus Gaylussacia, shrubs nearly related to the blueberries (Vaccinium), and formerly confused with them
A small round fruit of a dark blue color. The fruit is somewhat smaller than the blueberry which it resembles in look and taste. The fruit grows in small clumps on a bush that typically ranges in height between three and ten feet
a character in the books The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by the 19th century US writer Mark Twain. Huckleberry Finn is a very independent young boy who runs away from his father with his friend Jim, who is a black slave who has also run away. Sawyer, Tom. Finn, Huckleberry