It mean leaf
the color for phyll is green (coming from the color of chlorophyll- which is for plants that are green).
Some words containing the root word "phyll" are chlorophyll, phyllophyte, and phyllophagous.
You're referring to the Greek word phyllon, which means "leaf". (The Latin equivalent is folium.)
It is the basic photosynthetic pigment.It is in every photosynthetic organism.
The cast of Our Mr. Sun - 1956 includes: Eddie Albert as The Fiction Writer Lionel Barrymore as Father Time Frank Baxter as Dr. Research Sterling Holloway as Chloro Phyll Marvin Miller as Mr. Sun
The name Philpot is of English origin and is a variant of the surname Fillpot, which means "person who hawks or sells vessels made out of animal bladders." It is derived from the Middle English word "phyll" meaning fill and "potte" meaning pot.
do you mean mIcrophyll? there is only micro and megaphylls... mega - large; female phyll - leaf Megaphylls, in contrast, leave a "leaf gap" when they depart the stele, with some vascular strands leaving to supply the leaf, and the other strands closing up-stem of the divergence. Megaphylls are characterised by multiple venation. By this definition, the whisk ferns (psilopsids), club mosses (lycopods) and horsetails (sphenopsids) have microphylls, as all extant individuals only bear a single vascular trace in each leaf.[2] micro - small; male phyll - leaf microphyll is "an appendage supplied by a single, unbranched vein".[1] Despite their name, microphylls are not always microscopic; those of Isoetes (quillworts) reach centimetres in length, and the extinct Lepidodendron bore microphylls over a metre long.[citation needed] In the classical concept of a microphyll, this vein emerges from the protostele, without leaving a gap.
We only see green because of how our brain perceives the color. However, I'm pretty sure that the chlorophyll (and if you didn't know, Chlor means green and phyll means leaf), absorbs blue and red of the electromagnetic spectrum the best. However, most of the green are usually just reflected, and thus, since our eyes can only see the reflected light, the leaf looks green
It is impossible to give a sensible answer to this question. The mass of 15 ml of air will be very different from the mass of 15 ml of mercury. Furthermore, the weight of either will depend on the force of gravity acting upon them. In outer space they will weigh close to nothing while on the surface of a neutron star, they will weigh a huge amount!
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean