violet
the color violet is spelled the same in French. The flower is 'des violettes' (fem., usually plural).
African violets benefit from having their leaves rinsed off with tepid water or the same fertilizer/water mixture, when I water my African violets they get a total shower every time I water them (the fertilizer helps the leaves stay green and helps prevent powdery mildew. Make sure you blot off the excess water on the leaves and from the crown area to avoid water marks and to prevent crown rot. Also, if you are using artificial lighting to grow your African violets make sure you leave the lights off until leaves and especially the centers are dry.
VioletRoseLavender
no
Yes. It is perfectly legal for more than one state to have the same state bird. For example, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, and West Virginia all have the same state bird - the Cardinal. No matter how many states have previously used it, the Cardinal can still legally be used as another state's emblematic bird.
Yes, please look at the related link from another similar question. You separate them the same way.
African violets can reproduce asexually (or "without sex") when you take a cutting and place it in damp soil, allowing it to create a new bud. The new plant is a clone of the original plant, since it has the same genes as the original.When flowers make seeds, this is sexual reproduction that mixes the genes from two parental plants.Propogation is when you put down a leaf, roots grow from the leaf, then baby plantlets emerge, anywhere from one to 6 or more possibly. African violets do sport which means the new plant and plantlets it might produce can look entirely different than the original leaf or seed.
There are actually two sets of states with exactly the same kind of flower:Iowa and North Dakota: Wild Prairie RoseNew Jersey and Rhode Island: Violet
There are many colors of African violets; Yellow, pink,purple,lavender,white,white/pink, white/red,blue, and anythink between. Also the leaves come in variegated, plain green,mosaic which is similar to varigated but more spotted looking.
A bee's colour vision is not the same as ours. We see colours from red to blue violet, but a bee sees colours ranging from orange-yellow to ultra violet, so are blind to red. However, a red flower may not appear black to them because it may reflect ultra violet, which we can't see. Most flowers have patterns visible in ultra violet which help guide the bees to the nectar.
Yes it is in the same grouping as pansies and violets.