A jasmine is a dicot because dicots are flowering plants
No because it bears flowers
Jasmine does bloom only at night. While most flowering plants have hormones that tell it to bloom during the day, the Jasmine plants hormones tell it to bloom at night.
They are land plants and flowering plants.
Fuchsia plants will stop flowering if they do not get enough moisture. Fuchsia are also heavy feeders.
Lack of water, too much fertilizer, and too cold of temperatures can affect flowering of plants. Insufficient lighting would also stop flowering.
Kangaroo paw, impatiens, jasmine and viburnum are flowering plants in nature.
Sure. Any "jasmine" that produces fruit (and I think they all do) would produce a fruit called a "jasmine fruit". There are a number of plants called (in layman's terms) jasmine, including: 'orange jasmine' (Murraya paniculata), 'itallian jasmine' (Jasminum humile), "Arabian jasmine" (Jasminum sambac),... They are all flowering plants with fragrant flowers. Flowering plants (after pollenation) produce fruits. Note that what laymen call "jasmine" encompasses more than one genus (above we see Jasminium, and Murraya (Murraya also has "Curry Leaf" (Murraya koenigii)). Jasmine flowers (from some of the different types of jasmine) are added to some teas. Some of the fruiting jasmines have edible fruits and others non-edible.
Water lily, ginger, mango, orange jasmine, lotus, and periwinkle grow in the Deccan Plateau.
You get both flowering plants and non-flowering plants; non-flowering are things like mosses, ferns and liverworts which produce spore, flowering plants produce seeds
There are two types of flowering plants. These two types of flowering plants are the perennials and the annual flowering plants.
Flowering plants require pollinatio non-flowering plants do not.