Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Blackberry
Black′ber-ry
(blăk′bĕr-ry̆)
, Noun.
 [OE. 
blakberye
, AS. blæcberie
; blæc 
black + berie 
berry.] The fruit of several species of bramble (
Rubus
); also, the plant itself. Rubus fruticosus 
is the blackberry of England; Rubus villosus 
and Rubus Canadensis 
are the high blackberry and low blackberry of the United States. There are also other kinds. Definition 2025
blackberry
blackberry
See also: BlackBerry
English

Blackberries on a bush
Noun
blackberry (plural blackberries)
- A fruit-bearing shrub of the species Rubus fruticosus and some hybrids.
 - The soft fruit borne by this shrub, formed of a black (when ripe) cluster of drupelets.
 - (Britain, in some regions) The blackcurrant.
 
Synonyms
- (shrub and fruit): bramble
 
Derived terms
Translations
shrub
  | 
  | 
fruit
  | 
  | 
blackcurrant — see blackcurrant
Verb
blackberry (third-person singular simple present blackberries, present participle blackberrying, simple past and past participle blackberried)
-  To gather or forage for blackberries.
-  Arthur Bryson Gerrard, Butterflies & coalsmoke (page 62)
- Thereafter we blackberried unceasingly and returned with a large basketful, together with some maggoty windfall apples found neglected in the wet grass on the edge of an orchard and Mrs Clare duly stewed these for us.
 
 -  1925, Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway:
- She had gone up into the tower alone and left them blackberrying in the sun
 
 -  1977, Howard Frank Mosher, Disappearances, Mariner Books (2006), ISBN 9780618694068, page 111:
- My mother and Cordelia were blackberrying along the woods edge of a nearby meadow.
 
 -  2001, Thomas Keneally, Victim of the Aurora, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2001), ISBN 9780156007337, page 72:
- My wife and children were blackberrying at the end of the garden and I was simply reading.
 
 -  2004, Janet Bord, The Traveller's Guide to Fairy Sites: The Landscape and Folklore of Fairyland In England, Wales And Scotland, Gothic Image (2004), ISBN 9780906362648, page 48:
- Another instance of someone who is blackberrying and sees fairies can be found at Kingheriot Farm (South-West Wales: Pembrokeshire): maybe gathering berries puts the percipient into a relaxed or dissociated frame of mind, more conducive to being able to see things that one would perhaps not normally be able to see.
 
 
 -  Arthur Bryson Gerrard, Butterflies & coalsmoke (page 62)