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Sieve plates are cross walls separating the cells in the phloem and have lots of minute pores. These cross-walls look like a sieve and so are called sieve plates. The holes in the sieve plates allows rapid flow of manufactured food substances through the sieve tubes.
A sieve is a kitchen tool. It is for say if i had pasta than i would put the cooked pasta in it and the waterwould drain out because the sieve has little holes in the bottom
No, rock salt, being larger in size than the holes in the sieve, will not go through the sieve. The sieve will only allow smaller particles or substances to pass through, while retaining larger ones.
Not sure what you mean by the opposite of nectar. Bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers.
sieve tube.
Nectar in a Sieve was created in 1954.
Nectar in a Sieve has 190 pages.
No one
Sure! A possible thesis for "Nectar in a Sieve" could be: "The novel 'Nectar in a Sieve' explores the resilience of the human spirit in the face of adversity, highlighting the importance of perseverance and hope amidst challenges such as poverty, modernization, and loss."
Perhaps, if the regal government constitutes the ability to sieve nectar, provided it is in a powdered state thus allowing it to be sieved, if that is the case then perhaps the dictionary of law will allow the ability to sieve the substance in question, which it does in Page 397, Paragraph 2 Of The regal Constitution Of nectar Sieving.
He grows rice.
The epigraph for "Nectar in a Sieve" by Kamala Markandaya can be found at the beginning of the book before the first chapter. It is a quote from the Bhagavad Gita, a sacred Hindu scripture.
she didnt!! :D
Arjun, Thambi, Murugan, Raja, Selvam, and Kuti.
Rural India, during a time when there was a lot of urban development in the land.
A span of about thirty years in the first half of the twentieth century
It says in the book's translation of Indian words that a godown is a servant's quarters.