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  1. Dictionary
    plant
    /plɑːnt/

    noun

    • 1. a living organism of the kind exemplified by trees, shrubs, herbs, grasses, ferns, and mosses, typically growing in a permanent site, absorbing water and inorganic substances through its roots, and synthesizing nutrients in its leaves by photosynthesis using the green pigment chlorophyll. Similar herbflowervegetableshrub
    • 2. a place where an industrial or manufacturing process takes place: "a giant car plant" Similar factoryworksfoundrymill

    verb

    • 1. put (a seed, bulb, or plant) in the ground so that it can grow: "we planted a lot of fruit trees" Similar sowscatterseedput in the ground
    • 2. set or place in a particular position: "he planted himself squarely in front of her" Similar putplacesetposition

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meanings of plant as a noun and a verb in English, with different contexts and usage. Find out how to use plant to refer to living things, machines, factories, or secret actions.

  3. 1. a. : to put or set in the ground for growth. plant seeds. b. : to set or sow with seeds or plants. c. : implant. 2. a. : establish, institute. b. : colonize, settle. c. : to place (animals) in a new locality. d. : to stock with animals.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PlantPlant - Wikipedia

    By the definition used in this article, plants form the clade Viridiplantae (green plants), which consists of the green algae and the embryophytes or land plants (hornworts, liverworts, mosses, lycophytes, ferns, conifers and other gymnosperms, and flowering plants).

  5. to put or set in the ground for growth, as seeds, young trees, etc. to furnish or stock (land) with plants: to plant a section with corn. to establish or implant (ideas, principles, doctrines, etc.): to plant a love for learning in growing children. to introduce (a breed of animals) into a country.

    • Plant Definition
    • Plant Characteristics
    • Types of Plants
    • Related Biology Terms
    • Quiz
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Plants are multicellular organisms in the kingdom Plantae that use photosynthesis to make their own food. There are over 300,000 species of plants; common examples of plants include grasses, trees, and shrubs. Plants have an important role in the world’s ecosystems. They produce most of the world’s oxygen, and are important in the food chain, as ma...

    Plants are autotrophs; they produce their own food. They do so via photosynthesis, which is the process of making nutrients such as sugars from light energy and carbon dioxide. Photosynthesis occurs in cell organelles called chloroplasts, which contain chlorophyll and carotenoids, molecules that absorb light energy and change it into a usable form....

    Charophytes

    Charophytes are complex green algae such as stoneworts. They have cells with chloroplasts, cell walls containing cellulose, and store starch, as plants do. They reproduce sexually and some have sperm with flagella (tails that allow them to move), just like some plants do. Some fossil stoneworts are very similar to modern day ones.

    Bryophytes

    Bryophytes are nonvascular land plants. They do not have vascular tissue, which is tissue that transports water and nutrients. They are found both on land and in water. Common examples of bryophytes are mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Bryophytes are generally very similar to algae in their lack of a vascular system. They do have parts similar to roots, stems, and leaves, but these are not the true roots, stems, and leaves found in vascular plants. Liverworts were probably the first land pl...

    Seedless Vascular Plants

    Seedless vascular plants produce embryos that are not protected by seeds. Instead, they reproduce via spores. Members of this group include ferns, horsetails, quillworts, clubmosses, and spikemosses. These plants used to be called pteridophytes, but this turned out to be an inaccurate group because ferns and horsetails are more closely related to seed plants than to quillworts, clubmosses, and spikemosses. Seedless vascular plants flourished during the Devonian period and in Carboniferous for...

    Eukaryotic cell– A relatively large cell with a true nucleus and organelles.
    Chloroplast– An organelle found in plant cells that contains chlorophyll; it is where photosynthesis takes place.
    Organelle– A specialized structure within a cell that carries out a certain function in that cell.
    Alternation of generations– The alternation of diploid and haploid stages in a plant’s life cycle.

    1. Which is NOT a characteristic of plants? A. Asexual reproduction B. Sexual reproduction C. Heterotrophy D.Autotrophy 2. The gametophyte is ______ and produces ______ during reproduction. A. haploid; spores B. haploid; gametes C. diploid; spores D.diploid; gametes 3. Which plant is a gymnosperm? A. Pine tree B. Apple tree C. Moss D.Fern

    Learn what plants are, how they differ from other organisms, and how they reproduce. Explore the different types of plants, from charophytes to angiosperms, and their evolutionary history.

  6. noun. 1. any living organism that typically synthesizes its food from inorganic substances, possesses cellulose cell walls, responds slowly and often permanently to a stimulus, lacks specialized sense organs and nervous system, and has no powers of locomotion. 2.

  7. Jun 18, 2024 · Plant, any multicellular, eukaryotic, usually photosynthetic life-form in the kingdom Plantae. There are an estimated 390,900 different species of plants known to science. Learn more about the plant kingdom, including the life and evolutionary histories and physical characteristics of the major plant groups.