the axis

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New2grammar  #508928  Sat, 03 May 08 12:50 PM

 The pineapple is an example of a multiple fruit: multiple, spirally-arranged flowers along the axis each produce a fleshy fruit that becomes pressed against the fruits of adjacent flowers, forming what appears to be a single fleshy fruit.

Should the bolded phrase be corrected as ". Each produces"?

Also, what does "the axis" refer to in this passage? (It is not mentioned before) Here's the link if it helps

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pineapple

Thanks!

  
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Takoyaki-English  #508935  Sat, 03 May 08 01:22 PM

Hello.

"The pineapple is an example of a multiple fruit: multiple, spirally-arranged flowers along the axis each produce a fleshy fruit that..."

It's just that "the flowers each" produce a fleshy fruit.

  
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Takoyaki-English  #508936  Sat, 03 May 08 01:26 PM

Hello.

The Oxford Dictionary says:
When each is used after a plural subject, it has a plural verb: They each have their own email address.

"They each" could be replaced with "Each of them."

  
New2grammar  #508937  Sat, 03 May 08 01:30 PM

Thank you Takoyaki! That's really helpful. Any idea about the axis?

  
Takoyaki-English  #508952  Sat, 03 May 08 01:46 PM

New2grammar,
My pleasure.

I just left out "along the axis" to get to the point.

  
New2grammar  #508955  Sat, 03 May 08 01:55 PM

I still have no clue what the axis refers to. :(

  
Takoyaki-English  #508960  Sat, 03 May 08 02:13 PM

New2grammar,

A flower along the axis is one that has risen up vertically, I think.

  
New2grammar  #508965  Sat, 03 May 08 02:37 PM

You are saying the axis refers to a flower that's perpendicular to the ground. I'm afraid I can't picture that fruit. Which flower would that be? If all the flowers are all perpendicular to the ground, I don't see how they can form a cylindrical shaped fruit, instead they will form a plane over the ground, a plank-shaped pineapple, which would be a really expensive pineapple. I've seen a square watermelon from Japan sold at a price 50 times the usual round watermelon. :)

  
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