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What are the sentences describing mulberries?

Mulberry is also called mulberry. Mulberry trees in the north grow tall and big, and their fruits are black and sweet.

Mulberries are delicious, and all living beings love them, but silkworms don't like them-probably they are too sweet and sour, and they like soft mulberry leaves best.

There are not many varieties of mulberries, including white, pink and black, but each has its own characteristics.

The intoxicating blue mulberry tastes bitter and difficult to swallow. Only when it grows up and turns purple is the most delicious fruit, and everyone who feels sweet is juicy.

After the long summer, the mulberry fruit changed from bright red to purple, and a string of heavy mulberry fruits hung all over the branches, just like lanterns in festivals.

You see, the mulberry garden is full of mulberry fruits, which are red in white, purple in red and purple in black. Let's take action and launch a lively "picking movement"! ?

Mulberry fruit is rich in nutrients such as glucose, vitamins, amino acids, minerals, etc., and is praised by the medical community as "the best health fruit in 2 1 century".

I passed that tree, and a mulberry tree was full of fruits, that is, mulberries. We used to call it "Mulberry Fruit", which is purple and full of branches.

Stepping into the mulberry garden, a large area of mulberry trees came into view, as bright as jade and as shy as a little girl, hiding behind the green leaves.

Mulberry, also known as Mulberry, Mulberry, Mulberry Jujube and Black Ginseng, changes with the changes of local customs and spoken language. Mature mulberries are thick and juicy, leaving a fragrance on your teeth and cheeks.

Looking up at the green mulberry fruit, I seemed to see the innocent boy who was seven or eight years old and wore a vest on the horizontal bar. His legs were hanging upside down from the mulberry branches, his mouth was full of mulberry fruits, and his little face was full of extremely happy and satisfied smiles.

In early summer, things that look like flowers but are not flowers bloom under the branches and leaves, and fruits can be seen soon. This is a mulberry tree.

At first, the mulberry was turquoise, then green and white, then red, crimson and purplish red, and finally glossy black ink, so the mulberry matured.

Baskets of mulberries, purple and purple, purple almost turned black; Mulberry glows purple, fresh and tender, and the basket is dyed purple.

In the midst of admiration, I was surprised to find that mulberry trees were ripe, with white in green, purple in red and bright in purple, and densely covered with branches and leaves as green as stars.