Grass has all of the above. However, the stems of grasses are so small they're almost microscopic, which makes grass seem like it's just leaves and roots.
Yes. you can usually buy them at gardening stores in fair sized bags.
Grass is primarily leaves, especially if it frequently mowed. As it grows the stem components can become more obvious.
Corn, for example, is a grass.
No. Grasses have a more fibrous and adventitious root system than other plants do.
Yes, but they are so miniscule that they cannot be seen at a glance. A grass's stem is only 1 to 3 milimeters (mm) in length, and found very close to the ground, almost below ground level.
of course
It has small roots since it is a small plant
Obviously
A grain crop. Wheat is actually a type of grass, though a much different species than that you use for your lawn.
"Root crop" in Tagalog is "utong."
grass root refinery
Not directly. But many farmers interseed (plant amongst) a hay crop along with a grass crop like wheat or oats. The grass cover crop helps protect the hay crop while it is very young and prone to damage. When the grass crop is mature enough, the farmer harvests it and leaves the hay crop to grow on its own.
Grass
grass
Grass
it is a grain or cereal crop obtained from a grass seed head.
yes
Fibrous root
No, they actually grow on the vines of a tomato plant, which is like a vine/bush shrub. They are a fruit, and thus they are not a root crop
No, carrot is not a creeper. It is a root.