Yes, you can plant a tulip that has sprouted although obviously it is better to do so before this happens. Take care not to snap the roots while planting, and they will do a lot better than if you don't plant them. You can place it indoors if it can receive enough light, but once flowering has finished, it is best outdoors to enable it to receive the maximum amount of sun. Then it can store up reserves for next year's growth.
Jasmine is a tropical plant. It can be grown indoors. It can grow in containers and taken outside in the summer.
Any plant can be grown in doors as long as it has the right conditions to do so.
The Eugenia plant is an evergreen that is most often grown in pots indoors but can also be planted in the garden. The Eugenia plant is also known as brush cherries.
A cactus is a versatile plant. So it may be grown outdoors in the ground, in raised beds, in hanging baskets and window boxes if small, or in containers. It may be grown indoors as well.
Aloe Vera is preferentially grown and propagated using their pups, suckers or shoots. Generally, these are cut from the parent plant or are carefully pulled to keep the root system they have already developed. These usually grow out from the sides of the parent plant and have the smallest leaves of the bunch. Ideally, the pups, suckers or shoots should be left to dry for a day or two before re-planting. http://ezinearticles.com/?How-to-Grow-Aloe-Vera&id=2614878
Ornamental plants are ones that are not grown for food or medicinal value. They are grown for the beauty of the plant or its flowers. Such plants as roses, anthurium, orchids, chrysanthemums, and alocacia are examples of ornamental plants. Ornamentals may be grown indoors as a potted example or outdoors for landscaping material.
Hibiscus is a tropical plant. Unless you live in Hawaii or Southern Florida, it will need to be grown indoors except during warm weather.
Stage 0- Picking an plant stage 1- taking plant and disecting roots, shoots etc and placing into media stage 2- taking grown plant from stage 1 and disecting shoots and roots etc again and placing into media (growing roots) stage3- transferring plant to soil to acclimitize it before you plant out doors stage4- replanting plant in soil outside and letting it grow/survive
An aloe plant is mostly water and cold weather will cause cellular damage on the leaves if below 45 degrees or frost. When the weather drops to this temperature, return the plants indoors and in the spring, back outside again.
Although the question is vague, in a word the answer is YES. The US has a huge growing season variation from North to South, so having no idea what area you live in I will just mention that most areas will have to grow it as an annual plant outdoors, but indoors as a houseplant it could be grown as a perennial.
Yes
yes