berry
ber-ry / bĕr′ē ; plural berries
 
noun
 
1.      a small, juicy stoneless fruit, regardless of its botanical structure
Naturally sweet and juicy, berries are low in sugar and high in nutrients – they are among the best foods you can eat. 
Joel Fuhrman, 1953 –
 
2.      a simple fruit with a pulpy wall in which two or more seeds are embedded, such as a grape, blueberry, currant, tomato or banana
There is a devil in every berry of the grape. 
English proverb
 
3.      a dried kernel or seed, such as a coffee bean or wheat
But what is coffee, but a noxious berry, Born to keep used-up Londoners awake? 
Charles Stuart Calverley, 1831 – 1884
 
4.      an egg of a lobster, crayfish or fish
The Commissioners tell us[…] that the lobster is in its very best condition when it is laden with its berry[…]
From The Quarterly Review, Volume 144 (1877)
 
verb
 
1.      to pick or gather berries
Sometimes my sister would go berrying with me, but often I was on my own. 
From “Yankee Summer: The Way We Were: Growing Up in a Rural Vermont in the 1930s” by Lewis Hill, 1924 – 2008
 
2.      to grow or produce berries
Bring colour to your garden with berrying shrubs. 
 
 
bury
bur-y / bĕr′ē
verb
 
1.      to inter; to place in a grave or tomb, usually with a ceremony
Do not be like a miser who saves for those who will bury him. 
Malagasy Proverb
 
2.      to cover with earth
But there was something I liked about the idea of those seeds buried so deep having at least a chance to emerge. 
From “Just Listen” by Sarah Dessen, 1970 –
 
As the seed buried in the earth cannot imagine itself as an orchid or hyacinth, neither can a heart packed with hurt imagine itself loved or at peace. 
Mark Nepo, 1951 –
 
3.      to cover in order to hide or conceal
The greatest talents often lie buried out of sight. 
Plautus, 254 BC – 184 BC
 
4.      to embed
The friends we have lost do not repose under the ground…they are buried deep in our hearts. 
Alexandre Dumas, 1802 – 1870
 
 
5.      to engross in deep concentration
Buried in sorrow and in sin,
At hell’s dark door we lay;
But we arise by grace Divine
To see a heav’nly day.
From “Hymn 88” by Isaac Watts, 1674 – 1748
 
6.      to end; to abandon
It’s a poor bureaucrat who can’t stall a good idea until even its sponsor is relieved to see it dead and officially buried. 
Robert Townsend, 1920 – 1998