Some plants don't mind clay soil. But many plants do not. They get too much water around the roots and rot.
The seed would never germinate because it would be too sticky
It would probably die as it is an alien environment.
No.
Clay soils don't furnish enough aeration for plant roots, they basically sufficate.
Depends entirely what sort of lily and the requirement for that particular plant. Roses normally prefer slightly heavy, clay-type soils in a full sun position. If you can find a lily that requires the same soil, location and water requirements then there is no reason why they cannot be planted together.
There are many varieties of pine trees. I'll assume we are talking about the White Pine; most popular in the temperate zone. They like well drained, slightly acidic, moderately fertile soils, planted in full sun. Stay away from heavy clay soils. Or if planted in heavy clay soils plant the tree in a mound above the adjacent finished grades to provide better drainage away from the root system. Most pines will do best with these conditions.
he dies...
buble came
plants that like water grow better in clay and plant that don't like water grow better in sand. like cactus
It melts
Because soil has nutrients that clay and sand don't have
it depends on you zone but magnolia trees usually grow well in clay.