It is because your body doesn't digest the tough outer covering called the bran or the pericarp and it remains undigested in your stool or feces.
Cornflakes come from processed corn.
It depends on what language it comes from, but considering the categorization, I assume you mean from Spanish. In that case, it means corn.
Yes, corn is a noun; a singular or mass, common, concrete noun. The noun corn as a blemish on the foot can be singular or plural; 'a corn' or 'two corns'. The noun corn as the vegetable is a mass noun; 'a field of corn', 'an ear of corn', 'a bowl of corn', or 'a kernel of corn'.
No, corn is a producer.
The "hairs" inside an ear of corn are corn silk.
Corn oil comes from the corn kernels themselves.
Indirectly, yes. But directly, no. To make it simple, all forms of corn cereal come from corn, and corn comes from the ground. So in that way, corn cereal indirectly comes from the ground. But it does not literally grow from the ground. So in the technical sense, we cannot say corn cereal comes from the ground.
It comes from a plant because popcorn is corn and corn is a plant
Yes, it comes from corn.
No, popcorn doesn't come from animals. It comes from corn, and corn is a plant.
Biofuel comes from petroleum products which come from below the ground. Ethanol, however, the "bio" part of biofuels, comes from corn.
All ready would come first because L comes before R in the alphabet. If you had something such as acorn and a corn, a corn would come first because a space comes before any letter.
No, maple syrup comes from the Maple tree. Corn syrup comes from corn.
No, it comes from the corn plant.
Corn syrup comes from converting the starch in a kernel of corn into simple sugars, primarily glucose.
The husk on the individual kernel of corn is very fibrous. You actually don't chew as well as you think you do. It is not broken down through the digestive tract and comes out looking whole.
From corn.