Papaya The round black seeds of the papayaare the peppercorns.
Papaya The papaya contains abundance of round, shining, black seeds the size of buckshot or larger.
I may be permitted to add the result of some experiments which I attempted to make on the juice of the Carica papayaduring my stay in the valleys of Aragua, though I was then almost destitute of chemical tests.
The high topknot growth of the cocoanut palm and the similar foliage of the tall-shanked papaya afford a spectacle unlike anything we see at home.
Papaya and small berries were the foods most frequently observed in the stomachs.
It is then placed on a stick which has been secured directly under a papaya fruit.
It was seldom that a fully ripe papaya fruit was found that had not been at least partly eaten by the starlings.
The oratory is surrounded by a wall over which projects a papaya tree whose luscious golden fruit, shaped like a woman's teat, hangs in pendulent clusters from its crown.
We passed several small coffee plantations; in the clearings near the houses were banana, orange, and papaya trees.
A native fruit named the pepina, akin to the papaya is grown and from it a soft drink is made which although palatable is rather insipid.
The very atmosphere does this, and the pepsin extracted from the papaya by science is much used by druggists instead of animal extracts.
Boiled when green, thepapaya reminds one of vegetable marrow; and cooked when ripe, it makes a pie stuffing not to be despised.
See descriptions of the papayain Delgado's Historia, pp.
Ang punúan sa kapáyas gikibkiban sa bábuy, The pig has nibbled away at the trunk of the papaya tree.
Húmuk na kaáyu ang kapáyas kay latung na man, The papaya has turned soft because it is very ripe.
Mutaguk ang kapáyas ug tigbásun, The papaya will give off sap if it is cut.
Akuy nagpugas ánang lísu sa kapáyas dihà, I was the one who planted the papaya seeds there.
Ang kapáyas nga hinug dúnay kinutkutan sa kabug, The ripe papaya has a hole where the bat pecked on it.
Mulagúsù ang kapáyas nga tagudtud ug kan-un, A hard but ripe papaya produces a faint crunching sound when you eat it.
Putla nang kalabásà nga nagkuláput sa kapáyas, Cut down the squash that is entwined around the papaya tree.
Nahátak sa ubus ang kapáyas nga hinug na kaáyu, The overripe papaya fell to the ground.
The Papaya is a native of South America; it is found in Florida, and in many parts of tropical America; it was early introduced into Hawaii, grows and bears well in almost any locality.
The Papaya is usually dioceous; the fruit-bearing tree is called the female; it is claimed that trees of both sexes should be planted near each other, in order to ensure a good yield.
In some countries they wrap meat in papaya leaves for several hours before eating in order to soften it.
Daruty offers the following prescription for eczema and psoriasis: Exudate of papaya 1.
Lemarchand of the island of Mauritius gives the following anthelmintic prescription: Juice of papaya and molasses aa 1 tablespoon.
It is said that a tough steak, wrapped in the leaf of the papaya tree overnight, becomes tender as the result of the digestive action of the pepsin in it.
The papayais a sort of fruit which might be a cross between a cantaloupe, a watermelon and a pumpkin, except that it grows on trees.
For example, to the query, "Why does a papayaplant die after flowering?
There were pickles, squashes and medicine for papaya plants also on sale.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "papaya" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: berry; ebony; fruit; oak; orange; tree