monocot angiosperm
monocot
dicot angiosperm
A fir tree is considered a gymnosperm, which is neither a monocot nor a dicot. Gymnosperms are a distinct group of plants that produce seeds but do not have flowers or fruits like angiosperms (dicots and monocots). Fir trees belong to the Gymnosperm phylum.
An orange tree is a dicot, as it belongs to the category of flowering plants that have two seed leaves when germinating.
A maple tree is a dicot angiosperm. Dicots have two seed leaves, whereas monocots have one seed leaf and gymnosperms do not produce flowers or fruit. Maple trees belong to the angiosperm (flowering plant) group, producing seeds enclosed within an ovary.
The conifer is a monocotyledon because the leaves are narrowactually it is niether.
Litchi is a dicot plant. It belongs to the family Sapindaceae and is a dicotyledonous angiosperm.
A common grape is an angiosperm, (therefore is a dicot).
neither....it's a gymnosperm.
A crape myrtle is an angiosperm. Angiosperms are flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed within an ovary, which develops into a fruit. Crape myrtles produce flowers and fruits, classifying them as angiosperms.
Dicot ;)
Neither. The monocot/dicot classification only applies to flowering plants.