Nouns: need, needs, neediness, needfulness, needlessness,
needing (gerund)
Adjectives: needy, needed, needful, needless
Adverb: needfully
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This question makes no sense.
While humans are incapable of undergoing photosynthesis in any
way, shape or form, if it is somehow possible and this question
does make sense, then the economy will decrease significantly, due
to the needlessness of food and will raise the demand for CO2
emission and promotion of increased sunlight.
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aarrghh
accessibleness
addressee
affectlessness
aggressiveness
allottee
appellee
arrowwood
barrenness
betweenness
bitterroot
bittersweetness
bloodlessness
bookkeeper
bookkeeping
bootlessness
bottomlessness
cappelletti
carrottopped
cheerlessness
classlessness
committee
committeeman
committeemen
committeewoman
committeewomen
commonness
crestfallenness
effortlessness
foodlessness
footlessness
greenness
heedlessness
heelless
hiddenness
immunosuppress
keelless
keenness
needlessness
noncommittally
oppressiveness
possessedness
possessionless
possessiveness
premillennially
rootlessness
rottenness
skillessness
sleeplessness
soddenness
soullessness
speechlessness
stresslessness
stubbornness
subcommittee
successfully
successfulness
successionally
successiveness
suddenness
sullenness
suppressiveness
toolless
uncommonness
unsuccessfully
wheelless
whippoorwill
woodenness
woolliness
yellowwood
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The gardener's responsibilities in treating an African violet [Saintpauliaspp] with a wilting root or crown rot fungus [Pythium ultimum] are the following:
1. Cut off the dark, rotted, soft parts of the crown;
2. Clean and disinfecting the container;
3. Replace the soil;
4. Reroot the plant; and
5. Rethink the watering schedule.
Where the disease is advanced and widespread, the entire plant may need to be destroyed. The overall appearance and the ease with which the plant is removed from the soil are indicators of the seriousness of the fungal attack.
One of the tragedies in this scenario is the needlessness of its even taking place at all. It happens because of overwatering and poor drainage in unpasteurized soil. Specifically, prevention involves the following:
1. Make sure that the soil is pasteurized. This means heating an aluminum foil-sealed pan containing no more than a 4-inch [10.16-centimeter] high layer for 30 minutes at 180 - 200 degrees Fahrenheit [about 82 - 93 degrees Celsius].
2. Check the soil for clumps and for roots with not enough room, and the container bottom for obstacles to drainage.
3. Don't water as long as the soil is moist 1/2 inch [1 centimeter] down. You know it's moist if your finger or ruler or other object has speckles and freckles of dirt clinging to it. You know it's dry if nothing clings to your soil probe.