It "drinks" or basically sucks in the water through the stem. It makes the water into a special fluid, that the rose supplies its food with. It "eats/drinks" the fluid it makes out of the water.
With it's roots
A rose gets its nutrients from the soil through its roots. The roots absorb water and minerals from the soil and transport them to the rest of the plant, including the petals. Photosynthesis in the leaves also helps produce sugars that serve as additional nutrients for the rose.
The rose water contain water and a water soluble extract from rose petals.
it gets food by the sun
It depends. Does Rose like that sort of thing?
Rose water has a distinct flavor and aroma that regular water does not have. While you can substitute regular water for rose water in a recipe if you don't have any, keep in mind that the flavor profile will be different without the floral notes that rose water imparts.
Rose water is called "ரோஸ் நீர்" (pronounced as "rose neer") in Tamil.
Your rose bush may be dying due to factors like lack of water, sunlight, nutrients, or disease. To revive it, ensure it gets enough water, sunlight, and nutrients. Prune dead or diseased branches, and treat any diseases with appropriate remedies.
If you are talking about a cut rose and a cut daffodil in a vase of water, the daffodil will outlast the rose definitely. If you are talking about plants, the rose is a woody perennial and it will continue to live as long as it gets some water and maybe a little food. The daffodil is an herbaceous perennial and might last a month in the closet, but before the rose looks really bad, the daffodil will be nothing but withered leaves and a starved bulb.
well, you can make it your own homemade rose water.
Water is the solvent and anything else dissolved in it (rose extract, etc.) is/are the solutes.
To properly care for a mini rose bush, make sure it gets plenty of sunlight, water it regularly but avoid overwatering, fertilize it occasionally, prune dead or damaged branches, and protect it from pests and diseases.