Yes
Herbaceous plants, grasses, shrubs and most trees
Plants can be woody-stemmed such as shrubs and trees. Or they can be herbaceous, or herblike, in their stems. A woody's above-ground parts go dormant each year, but don't die. All or most of herbaceous plant above-ground parts die each year. It's all if the plant's an annual, and lives just one year. It's most if the plant's biennial or perennial, and lives more than one year. Examples of herbaceous plants are ferns, flowers, grasses, herbs, vegetables, and weeds.
which is a very sall plant with soft stems
Plants that have flowers and produces seeds that are enclosed inside a carpel are angiosperms. The seed-bearing vascular plants include shrubs, most trees, herbaceous plants, and grasses.
Most are all herbaceous plants that comprise of 80% grass species and 20% forbs. None of these plants are woody stemmed (except some shrub species like sagebrush, willow and carragana that grows in patches), and all are adapted to live out in the open in full sun.
Who ever is reading this your a mother
Yes. As you can see, herbaceous stems are soft and green while woody stems are thick, hard and woody. Stems can be of several sorts, herbaceous and woody. The herbaceous stems are green and fairly bendable. The woody stems as their name implies, are covered by bark. The herbaceous stem has more pith for its size. The cambium which causes woody stems to get bigger in width is not as active in the herbaceous stems. Most herbaceous plants are annuals or planted yearly. The herbaceous stem has little notches where leaves develop. Woody stems have scars where twigs and fruit have dropped off and little openings for transpiration.
Plants with light and spongy stems are commonly known as herbaceous plants. These plants have non-woody stems that are soft, flexible, and often contain high water content. Examples include most flowers, vegetables, and grasses.
Well, honey, herbaceous plants are like your annuals and perennials - think daisies and hostas. Woody plants, on the other hand, are your trees and shrubs, like oaks and azaleas. So, if you want a garden that's poppin' all year round, mix and match those herbaceous and woody beauties.
soil
No
Yes, plants live in all but the most exteme of deserts such as the Antarctic where few plants live and are rare in the Atacama Desert.