No, because of that: They're flowers. Flowers are actually a reproductive organ of a flower, which either produces pollen or eggs (seeds), or even both. Those flowers could become fruits later on. As for spores, ferns and fungi (both start with an F!) produce them, though.
Hosta flowers do make seeds.
Yes. Seeds grow within the flower.
I think seeds
Gymnosperms (pines, spruces and the like) have neither fruit nor flowers. The seeds are carried in cones.
They use seeds.
yes
Moss has no flower or seed.
Tobacco flowers in the later stages of development. These flowers contain seeds that when dry can be seeded to make transplants the following year. They are very tiny seeds.
The flowers are the structures on a plant that produce seeds for reproduction. Inside the flowers, the male pollen from the stamen fertilizes the female ovule in the pistil, resulting in the formation of seeds.
To another flower, and even to the bees; all flowers are pretty.
two plant parts that make seeds are pine cones and flowers
Flowers attract insects. Insects pollinate the flowers. Pollinated flowers produce seeds. Seeds grow into apples.