Through the roots, but some plants obtain humidity through their leaves.
Water is used by the plant for photosynthesis and is released from the plant during transpiration as water vapour
inside the plant or deep inside the ground/dirt
xylem and phluem
go outside and fill it with water from the geyser at the front of the castle, then go back to the plant and now your plant will have water. Filling it with rain does not work.
most of it (98%) will go through the plant the rest will be used in photosynthesis
chloroplasts
It needs food, water, soil, nutrients, and light.
well at first the roots carry it up to the middle of the plant, then they go into the chloroplast and it stores there/ Osmosis carry water through the plant cells.
go to a none full grown plant then you should be able to water it.
water saturates the dirt and is sucked into the plants through its roots
Yes well that depends who you look at it. When you water a plant it does not just go into the plant but, the roots do such it up in a mater of time, from there water gets put into plants.
when a plant takes up water from the roots the water and nutrients go into the xylem and go up the stem by both adhesion and cohesion to get to the leaves. the leaves of the plant use transpiration to pull the water up by letting out water vapour and gases through the stomata and guard cells.