Cotton is grown in fields. Not from an animal.
No, the word cotton is a noun, a common, concrete, uncountable noun as a word for a plant grown in warm regions that has white fibers used for making cotton cloth; an uncountable, material noun as a word for cloth made from the white fibers of a plant; a countable noun for articles of clothing made from cotton fiber.The word cotton is also an informal verb meaning to begin to understand, to begin to like someone or something.Although it is not an adjective, the noun cotton is often used to describe another noun, for example a cotton shirt or a cotton dress. This use is called an attributive noun (noun as adjective) or can be considered a compound noun, such as cotton balls or cotton candy.
From old French 'Bege', taken from the natural colour of wool and cotton, not dyed. The origin however, is thought to be obscure
Wet cotton
Now, they are typically from cows, but they use to come from Ox, which are nothing more then castrated bulls. Ox-Tail is nothing more then the tail of a beef animal.
Yes, the noun 'cotton' is an mass noun as a word for the substance that things are made from.The noun 'cotton' is a count noun as a word for the fabric or clothing made from cotton.
It comes from sheep(animal).
anything that is cotton and looks like animal fur
Linen is made from the fibres of the flax plant. Wool is from the fleece of an animal such as the sheep or alpaca. Silk is a thread unwound from a cocoon of a silkworm. Cotton is a thread made from the cotton plant.
Natural fibers come from plant, animal and mineral sources. For example cotton fiber comes from the cotton plant / boll. Linen from the flax plant.
Cotton dresses come from the cotton ball of a flower
And linen can be a mixture of things, (wool/cotton, etc), but it is mostly cotton.
They come from places where there are both, cotton and polyester.
cotton
By animal
Cotton fibres come from cotton plants -- that is the base.
No, it comes from a cotton plant.
The cotton plant is a shrub.