Cotton fiber is obtained from the plant by application of a chemical defoliant.
No, cotton is a plant fibre.
Cotton is a natural fibre and is found on a plant called cotton flowers
Cotton is obtained by ginning , spinning
Cotton is a soft, fluffy staple fiber that grows in a boll, or protective capsule, around the seeds of cotton plants of the genus GossypiumCotton fibre is obtained from the epidermal cells of cotton seeds
Bhoomi Mehta, added an answer, on 25/4/18. Bhoomi Mehta answered this. Cotton is obtained from the fruit (cotton bolls)of the part of plant and jute is obtained from the stem of the plant.
You should be able to - sheep produce wool which is a natural fibre. Cotton is also a natural fibre but it is plant based.
Cotton is a fibre made of cellulose. It comes from a plant. 'Fat' has to do with animals, not plants.
it is because it will be easier to remove the fibre from the stem and the fibre is obtained from the stem
Cotton lint is the fibre derived from seed cotton after the seed cotton has been ginned. Seed cotton is the ball of the cotton plant as picked from the field.
No. Cotton plants are reproduced through their seeds. Commercial cotton -- the fibre -- is harvested from the cotton bolls what grow on the shrub.
Cotton doesn't 'do' anything: cotton is a plant fibre used in clothing, and used for other applications. One could say, however, that cotton absorbs.
Cotton is a soft, staple fibre that grows in a form known as a boll around the seeds of the cotton plant, a shrub native to tropical and subtropical regions around the world, including the Americas, India and Africa.