odd choice of words “handle” and “fruit” to which add ambiguity to your post
for clarity i take both words to mean
handle (v.)
Middle English hondlen, handlen, “touch with the hands, hold in the hands, fondle, pet,” also “to deal with, treat, manhandle,” from Old English handlian “to touch or move with the hands,” also “deal with, discuss;” formed from hand (n.), perhaps with a frequentative suffix, as fondle from fond. Cognate with Old Norse höndla “to seize, capture,” Danish handle “to trade, deal,” Old High German hantalon “feel, touch; manage,” German handeln “to bargain, trade.” Related: Handled; handling. Meaning “to act towards” (someone, in a certain manner, usually with hostility or roughness) is from c. 1200. The commercial sense “to trade or deal in” was weaker in English than in some other Germanic languages, but it strengthened in American English (by 1888) from the notion of something passing through one’s hands, and see handler.
fruit (n.)
late 12c., “any vegetable product useful to humans or animals,” from Old French fruit “fruit, fruit eaten as dessert; harvest; virtuous action” (12c.), from Latin fructus “an enjoyment, delight, satisfaction; proceeds, produce, fruit, crops,” from frug-, stem of frui “to use, enjoy,” from suffixed form of PIE root *bhrug- “to enjoy,” with derivatives referring to agricultural products. The Latin word also is the source of Spanish fruto, Italian frutto, German Frucht, Swedish frukt-.
Originally in English meaning all products of the soil (vegetables, nuts, grain, acorns); modern narrower sense is from early 13c. Also “income from agricultural produce, revenue or profits from the soil” (mid-14c.), hence, “profit,” the classical sense preserved in fruits of (one’s) labor.
Meaning “offspring, progeny, child” is from mid-13c.; that of “any consequence, outcome, or result” is from late 14c. Meaning “odd person, eccentric” is from 1910; that of “male homosexual” is from 1935, underworld slang. The term also is noted in 1931 as tramp slang for “a girl or woman willing to oblige,” probably from the fact of being “easy picking.” Fruit salad is attested from 1861; fruit-cocktail from 1900; fruit-bat by 1869.
please clarify what the same two words mean in the context of your post to clear up the ambiguity
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