bullace in English

noun
1
a thorny shrub or small tree of the rose family that bears purple-black fruits. It is a wild plum, of which the damson is the cultivated form.
It didn't take long to track down two types of bullace in West Berkshire in the surrounding area, thanks to Newbury Weekly News readers and BBC Radio Berkshire listeners.

Use "bullace" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "bullace" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "bullace", or refer to the context using the word "bullace" in the English Dictionary.

1. 1 synonym for Bullace: Prunus insititia

2. Care for Langley Bullace Damson

3. What does Bullace mean? Information and translations of Bullace in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions …

4. Bullace translation in English-Vietnamese dictionary

5. A recipe for Bullace jam (makes approx

6. Bullace - WordReference English dictionary, questions, discussion and forums

7. What does Bullaces mean? Plural form of bullace

8. Definition of Bullace in the Definitions.net dictionary

9. The latest form guide, statistics and horse racing analysis for Bullace

10. The Bullace morphologically resembles the common, or European, plum (P

11. - Book great deals at Bullace Barn with Expedia.com - Check guest reviews, photos

12. The Bullace morphologically resembles the common, or European, plum (P

13. Bullace can be found in hedgerows, woodlands, parks and gardens

14. Langley Bullace can be espaliered or trained to trellis or wire

15. To make Bullace (or damson) cheese, use 1.5kg of fully ripe fruit

16. This year has been an exceptional year for the Bullace fruits

17. The Bullace vodka is a more recent venture, has the same life-giving properties

18. Pruning and training young trees is the most important part of Langley Bullace

19. See authoritative translations of Bullace in Spanish with example sentences and audio pronunciations.

20. Synonyms: Bullace; Prunus insititia Hypernyms ("Bullace" is a kind of): plum; plum tree (any of several trees producing edible oval fruit having a smooth skin and a single hard stone)

21. Langley Bullace is a self-fruitful tree that creates round to oblong, clingstone fruit

22. Bullace definition is - a European plum (Prunus domestica insititia) with small ovoid fruit in clusters.

23. At the outside of the orchard, damson, Bullace, and tall plum trees had been planted

24. The Bullace is propagated by seeds, suckers, and green cuttings; the plants are used as stock.

25. 1) Word Origin for Bullace C14: from Old French beloce, from Medieval Latin bolluca, perhaps of Gaulish origin

26. Discover genuine guest reviews for Bullace Barn along with the latest prices and availability – book now

27. The Bullace is propagated by seeds, suckers, and green cuttings; the plants are used as stock.

28. Today and yesterday me and Mrs H picked 6kg of Bullaces and sloes and have made 8 litres of Bullace

29. Another one who has discovered the delights of the Bullace, I was beginning to think I was the only one

30. 15105 Bullace St, Austin, TX is a single family home that contains 1,079 sq ft and was built in 2007

31. We are very lucky to have a tall hedge on our couple of acres, it is a mix of holly, blackthorn and Bullace

32. Bullace, less well-known today, is a type of plum and was commonly cultivated and used before larger (and sweeter) plums and greengages became preferred

33. I was making some bullace and apple jam (recipe for Bullace Jam is HERE – but the Bullaces (wild damson-like fruit) were not as numerous or as large and juicy as usual so I had a feeling that the 4½ lbs lbs would make nothing like the 10 x 1lb pots I hoped for.

34. 1, Place Bullace and water in large* Pyrex or similarly heat proof microwave safe bowl, covered, 10 mins high power to soften fruit

35. Hyponyms (each of the following is a kind of "Bullace"): damson plum; damson plum tree; Prunus domestica insititia (plum tree long cultivated for its edible fruit)

36. SHROPSHIRE PRUNE DAMSON This is a small plumlike fruit, measuring only a single centimetre long and wide, and is thought to be a hybrid of Bullace (wild plum)

37. There are a few varieties but the most often seen in British hedgerows is the black Bullace – a round dark blue fruit, smaller than a damson and larger than a sloe.

38. Bullace Barn is a detached, stone-built barn conversion, on a working farm, on the edge of the village of Milllhouse Green, on the border of the Peak District National Park

39. ROYAL Bullace. Fruit large, 1 1/4 inch in diameter. Skin bright grass-green, mottled with red on the side next to the sun and becoming yellowish-green as it ripens, with a thin, grey bloom on the surface

40. ‘Gages, Bullaces and damsons are all grown in the same way as plums.’ ‘I discovered a Bullace tree, a wild plum, absolutely loaded with fruit and resolved to pick some fruit and make some wine, all the while documenting the process with recordings.’

41. This entry was posted on September 25, 2015, in Enjoyable days out, Gardening - Flowers, Gardening - Tomatoes and tagged Autumn is here, Bullace jelly, Car boot bargains, Leicester Castle Gardens, Making wine, My garden this week, Picking salads, Ripening tomatoes, Using flower petals in salads

42. Most of the other hedges are a mix of hazel, maple and ash, with here and there a holly, crab apple, Bullace or an oak, and an under-blush of dogwood, the hips of wild roses or the exquisite little pink berries of the spindle tree

43. Bullace: 1 n small wild or half-domesticated Eurasian plum bearing small ovoid fruit in clusters Synonyms: Prunus insititia Types: Prunus domestica insititia , damson plum , damson plum tree plum tree long cultivated for its edible fruit Type of: plum , plum tree any of several trees producing edible oval fruit having a smooth skin and a

44. The Bullace is a variety of plum.It bears edible fruit similar to those of the damson, and like the damson is considered to be a strain of the insititia subspecies of Prunus domestica.Although the term has regionally been applied to several different kinds of "wild plum" found in the United Kingdom, it is usually taken to refer to varieties with a round shape, as opposed to the oval damsons.