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Greenline Wholesale Fruit & Veg. Ltd.

Address

The Byre, Red House Farm
Hartside
Co Durham
DH1 5RJ



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Greenline Wholesale Fruit & Veg. Ltd. Details:

Wholesale Fruit And Vegetables

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wholesale

the sale of goods in quantity, as to retailers or jobbers, for resale .
1. of, pertaining to, or engaged in sale by wholesale.
2. extensive; broadly indiscriminate: wholesale discharge of workers.
1. in a wholesale way; on wholesale terms: I can get it for you wholesale.
2. in large quantities; on a large scale, esp. without discrimination: Wild horses were slaughtered wholesale.
to sell by wholesale.
3. the business of selling to retailers, esp. in large quantities .

fruit

1. any product of plant growth useful to humans or animals.
2. the developed ovary of a seed plant with its contents and accessory parts, as the pea pod, nut, tomato, or pineapple.
3. the edible part of a plant developed from a flower, with any accessory tissues, as the peach, mulberry, or banana.
4. the spores and accessory organs of ferns, mosses, fungi, algae, or lichen.
5. anything produced or accruing; product, result, or effect; return or profit: the fruits of one''s labors.
6. Slang . a male homosexual.

1. fruit, reproductive structure
usage: the ripened reproductive body of a seed plant
2. fruit, consequence, aftermath
usage: the consequence of some effort or action; "he lived long enough to see the fruit of his policies"
3. yield, fruit, product, production
usage: an amount of a product

co durham

The constituency consisted of the whole county of Durham .

Because of its semi-autonomous status as a county palatine, Durham had not been represented in Parliament during the medieval period; by the 17th century it was the only part of England which elected no MPs. In 1621, Parliament passed a bill to enfranchise the county, but James I refused it the royal assent, as he considered that the House of Commons already had too many members and that some decayed boroughs should be abolished first; a similar bill in 1624 failed to pass the House of Lords. During the Commonwealth, County Durham was allowed to send members to the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate, though the privilege was not maintained when Parliament reverted to its earlier electoral arrangements from 1658. After the Restoration, Durham''s right to return MPs was recognised in 1661, and finally confirmed by statute which came into effect in 1675; the county was to return two members, and the same Act also established Durham City as a parliamentary borough with its own two members.