Buttercup, castor bean, daffodil, English ivy, eucalyptus, foxglove, holly, horse chestnut, iris, Jack-in-the-pulpit, larkspur, morning glory, potato, oleander, tomato, yew, wisteria, sweet pea, rhubarb.
Poison by contact or poison by consumption are the two main categories within which poisonous plants fall.
A good example of the two poisonous possibilities in one plant may be seen in poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans). All parts of the plant contain urushiol oil. Interaction with that oil is harmless for wildlife. It can be uncomfortable, painful or downright fatal for people.
Specifically, contact with the oil occurs by brushing against the plant and breaking open the stem, for example. Consumption occurs when the plant is burned and its toxic particles thereby are caught up in the area's air circulation. Either way, particles that come in contact with any part of the head or the respiratory system provoke a medical emergency. The situation is so critical that unless given proper medical care, the patient may die from the body's reaction to the urushiol particles in the air.
Pentose sugars are sugars that contain 5 carbon atoms. Two most common examples are ribose (RNA component) and deoxyribose (DNA component)Also arabinos,xyluse,ribulose
They all contain nucleotides.
They contain cytoplasm.
carboxylic acid
The common bread mold Rhizopus.
Aloe, amaryllis, cyclamen, dieffenbachia, philodendron.
They are both poisonous
No, the common frog (or European Common Frog or European Common Brown Frog) is not poisonous. Wikipedia has addidtional information, and a link is provided.
Is not very common but if you do come into contact with it it is very poisonous.
Most outdoor fertilizer is too strong for common houseplants.
Pentose sugars are sugars that contain 5 carbon atoms. Two most common examples are ribose (RNA component) and deoxyribose (DNA component)Also arabinos,xyluse,ribulose
yes "Quick silver" is a common term for mercury. Mercury is a liquid metal and is poisonous.
they all outdoor
"Common salt", with the chemical formula NaCl, does not contain any hydrogen. The much larger chemical class of "salts" includes some examples that do contain hydrogen, for example the ammonium salts.
Penuts.
Potatoes
Examples of common nouns:appleboatcouchdaggereggfoamgorillaharpicejoykneelollipopmothernotionoperapurposequailrocksteakteacherurchinvalleyworkbenchyogurtzoologist