Sure can! Here is a partial list of yellow flowers:
There are many beautiful yellow flowers found in nature, and some are grown by botanists through artificial selection to produce yellow color. Some examples from both camps are: Sunflowers, yellow tulips, daisies and yellow roses.
daisies
Daffodils do not go to seed. The grow from bulbs ( the main root of the plant. ) I usually tear apart my daffodils every 4 to 5 years and separate the bulbs, and replant them in different locations. On a side note . . . Deer detest daffodils, so they are a great flowering plant to grow if you have a large deer population. Daffodils do produce seed. Seed from species will come true to type and can take a few years to produce flowers. Hybrids will not come true from seed so are multiflied by various manipulations of the bulbs.
white,pink,red,yellow,champagne, purple, blue, red-tipped yellow, yellow, lilac, orange, and coral.
Rabbits.
yellow feathers (apart from the, nothing)
pineapple and lemon
Because these are responsible for sexual reproduction and seed formation. Apart from this flowers have great aesthetic value.
to tell him apart from bali
to tell him apart from bali
A necklace made of flowers
you find the yellow wire behind the glove box on the uper left hand side and pull the red clip out and pull apart the yellow wires apart
Lilacs cannot be cross-bred with daffodils. Though they are both flowering dicots, the lilac is a woody perennial and the daffodil is a herbaceous perennial. They are too far apart to be genetically compatible. However, in the Internet game, Farmville, I hear they have cross-bred one for the game, and it's called a Lilac Daffy.
Some flowers that rhyme with "smart" include heart, chart, and apart.