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  2. Fruit Basket Turnover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruit_Basket_Turnover

    Fruit Basket Turnover or Fruit Basket Upset, also known as Fruit Salad, Fruit Bowl, Fruits Basket [] and others is a children's game.. Fruit Basket usually refers to a variation in which each fruit is ostensibly associated with only one player, and the player in the centre must call two fruit names.

  3. Yggdrasil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yggdrasil

    "The Ash Yggdrasil" (1886) by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine. Yggdrasil (from Old Norse Yggdrasill) is an immense and central sacred tree in Norse cosmology.Around it exists all else, including the Nine Worlds.

  4. Pandora's box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandora's_box

    Pandora's box is an artefact in Greek mythology connected with the myth of Pandora in Hesiod's c. 700 B.C. poem Works and Days. [1] Hesiod related that curiosity led her to open a container left in the care of her husband, thus releasing curses upon mankind. Later depictions of the story have been varied, with some literary and artistic ...

  5. Golden apple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_apple

    Michael Hübner has suggested that the fruit of the Argan tree, endemic to the Sous Valley in present-day Morocco, may be the golden apples of the Hesperides. Arguing that the location matches most closely the description given in classical texts of Atlantis and the garden of the Hesperides, he notes that the ripe fruits look like small golden ...

  6. Lotus-eaters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lotus-eaters

    Odysseus removing his men from the company of the lotus-eaters. In Greek mythology, lotophages or the lotus-eaters (Ancient Greek: λωτοφάγοι, romanized: lōtophágoi) were a race of people living on an island dominated by the lotus tree off coastal Tunisia (Island of Djerba), [1] [2] a plant whose botanical identity is uncertain.

  7. Forbidden fruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forbidden_fruit

    The word fruit appears in Hebrew as פְּרִי ‎, pərî. As to which fruit may have been the forbidden fruit of the Garden of Eden, possibilities include an apple, grapes, a pomegranate, [6] a fig, [7] carob, [6] etrog or citron, [6] pear, quince, wheat, banana, coco de mer, and mushrooms.

  8. Synsepalum dulcificum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synsepalum_dulcificum

    Outsiders began learning this fruit since at least the 18th century, when a European explorer, the Chevalier des Marchais, provided an account of its use there. Des Marchais, who was searching West Africa for many different fruits in a 1725 excursion, noticed that local people picked the berry from shrubs and chewed it before meals.

  9. Adam's Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam's_Mark

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