Well if you ask me, calling everything a bramble is just one of those strange northern things...
My classification (which I think broadly agrees with everyone else, in bits, maybe) is that 'bramble' is a sort of superclass, consisting of all the various hedge dwelling plant life with big spiky bits on. Any berries are named according to the specific type of bush they came from eg: Blackberries. I've never heard of the fruit being called 'brambles' before.
According to this though, jam made from > 1 type of fruit should be Brambleberry Jam, so summat's off-kilter somewhere though.
Additionally, I've not really seen 'bramble' used as a singular noun before, only in the plural (some brambles), or as a pronoun (a bramble bush).
Before anyone asks: Yes i did have to look up a large chunk of the English language to explain that, and I've probably still got it wrong...
My 2cp
Date: 2003-07-14 10:36 am (UTC)My classification (which I think broadly agrees with everyone else, in bits, maybe) is that 'bramble' is a sort of superclass, consisting of all the various hedge dwelling plant life with big spiky bits on. Any berries are named according to the specific type of bush they came from eg: Blackberries. I've never heard of the fruit being called 'brambles' before.
According to this though, jam made from > 1 type of fruit should be Brambleberry Jam, so summat's off-kilter somewhere though.
Additionally, I've not really seen 'bramble' used as a singular noun before, only in the plural (some brambles), or as a pronoun (a bramble bush).
Before anyone asks: Yes i did have to look up a large chunk of the English language to explain that, and I've probably still got it wrong...