The citrus definitely got named first. The earliest recorded use of orange the fruit in English is from the 1300s and came to us from the Old French orenge, adapted from the Arabic nāranj, from the Persian nārang, from the Sanskrit nāranga (“orange tree”)
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Answer:
• adj– whose
type – interrogative
• adj– it's
type – possessive
• adj– enough
type – quantity
• adj– this, second
type – this : demonstrative, second : number
• adj– her
type – possessive
• adj– what, great
type – what : exclamatory, great : quality/ descriptive
• adj–few
type – quantity
• adj– four, second
type – four : number, second : number
• adj– new
type – quality/ descriptive
Explanation:
[tex]hope \: it \: helps \: u \: army[/tex]
Answer:
The citrus definitely got named first. The earliest recorded use of orange the fruit in English is from the 1300s and came to us from the Old French orenge, adapted from the Arabic nāranj, from the Persian nārang, from the Sanskrit nāranga (“orange tree”)
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