the most obvious answer to that question would be no because it is alive , but if ur taking inanimate as meaning not moving...plants are not inanimate as many do indeed move to remove their leaves from too much sun or in the case of sunflowers to follow the sun.
Anamism. This is the belief that every plant, animal, and inanimate object has a soul or spirit. They have shamans to contact these spirits.
A piece of wood is an inanimate object. OR: Items that are not living are considered an inanimate item.
inanimate
This is an inanimate object.
Anamism. This is the belief that every plant, animal, and inanimate object has a soul or spirit. They have shamans to contact these spirits.
no. theyre inanimate. theyre not alive.
Anatomy is a noun for the physical structure of a plant, animal, and sometimes inanimate things such as a building or a script. There is no direct antonym for anatomy. A plant, a creature, or a plot may be 'formless' but its formlessness is its structure.
A Venus fly trap is a living plant, while glue of any kind is an inanimate substance.
That is the correct spelling of "inanimate" (unmoving, by extension non-living).
Conversations with Inanimate Objects was created in 2005.
They never developed an equivalent of muscles - probably because they're the ultimate in waiting for their "prey" to come to them. (Their prey being air, water, and sunlight.)
Inanimate means not having life or spirit; lacking consciousness or power of motion. An object that has no life, like a teddy bear for example, is an inanimate object. Though plants are living organisms, they are considered inanimate objects.