A well-known edible berry growing in pendent clusters or bunches on the grapevine
Any of thousands of varieties of edible berries that grow in clusters "Slip-skin" varieties have skins that slip off easily Table grapes are eaten out-of-hand Grapes used for wines are highly acid and generally too tart to eat
any of various juicy purple- or green-skinned fruit of the genus Vitis; grow in clusters any of numerous woody vines of genus Vitis bearing clusters of edible berries
any of various juicy purple- or green-skinned fruit of the genus Vitis; grow in clusters
Also called grapeshot in some modern work; an antipersonnel projectile consisting of large iron shot grouped around an iron or wooden stool (a base disk supporting a vertical core), wrapped with cloth and tied into shape A round of grape disintegrated when fired and scattered its fragments, and was widely used against troops during the 18th century before being replaced by canister during the 1800s Its larger shot made it effective at longer ranges than canister, but it was less deadly at the critical shorter range