True nuts are a type of fruit that have a hard shell surrounding a seed. They differ from other types of nuts, like peanuts and almonds, which are technically seeds or legumes. True nuts include examples like chestnuts, acorns, and hazelnuts.
Nuts that are botanically classified as true nuts include acorns, chestnuts, and hazelnuts. Other popular "nuts" like almonds, walnuts, and pecans are technically seeds or drupes.
Many things that are called nuts actually aren't by the strict botanical definition. For example: almonds, Brazil nuts, cashews, macadamias, peanuts, pecans, pine nuts, pistachios and walnuts are all technically not really nuts. Hazelnuts, hickory nuts, chestnuts and acorns are some examples of true nuts. pretty much none of them.
Bacteria cells lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, which are found in other types of cells.
There are three types of ribs in the human body: true ribs, false ribs, and floating ribs. True ribs are connected directly to the sternum, false ribs are connected to the sternum indirectly or not at all, and floating ribs are not connected to the sternum at all. Each type of rib plays a role in protecting the organs in the chest and supporting breathing, but they differ in their attachment points and flexibility.
In an experimental study, the only factor that should differ between treatments is the variable being tested or manipulated. This ensures that any differences in the outcomes can be attributed to the treatment being evaluated, rather than other unrelated factors. Controlling for all other variables helps to isolate the true effect of the treatment on the outcome of interest.
Cashew "nuts" are not true nuts. They have no shell.
A brute fact is a fact that is true without any explanation or deeper reason behind it. It differs from other types of facts because it does not rely on any underlying principles or causes to be true. Brute facts are simply accepted as they are, without further justification.
Nuts that are botanically classified as true nuts include acorns, chestnuts, and hazelnuts. Other popular "nuts" like almonds, walnuts, and pecans are technically seeds or drupes.
A tautological argument is a type of reasoning where the conclusion is already implied in the premises, making it always true. This differs from other types of logical reasoning where the conclusion is not necessarily guaranteed by the premises and requires further evidence or reasoning to support it.
No, not all true nuts grow on trees. True nuts are botanical fruits composed of a hard outer shell surrounding an edible seed. While many true nuts like acorns and chestnuts grow on trees, others like hazelnuts grow on shrubs.
Many things that are called nuts actually aren't by the strict botanical definition. For example: almonds, Brazil nuts, cashews, macadamias, peanuts, pecans, pine nuts, pistachios and walnuts are all technically not really nuts. Hazelnuts, hickory nuts, chestnuts and acorns are some examples of true nuts. pretty much none of them.
Bacteria cells lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles, which are found in other types of cells.
true
true
There are three types of ribs in the human body: true ribs, false ribs, and floating ribs. True ribs are connected directly to the sternum, false ribs are connected to the sternum indirectly or not at all, and floating ribs are not connected to the sternum at all. Each type of rib plays a role in protecting the organs in the chest and supporting breathing, but they differ in their attachment points and flexibility.
TRUE
I doubt it. But how do you define "normal"?