i don't think so
Yes, most fruit can, with careful choice of electrodes.
Electricity doesn't have color. Your question can't be answered.
no that would have to be transportation. we could easily live without electricity. just make a fire and cook your food over that
It can be bent, and it conducts electricity.
Electricity was a new and little-understood phenomenon in European Physicslaboratories during US colonial times. There was not a single telephone, radio,Playstation, or light bulb anywhere in North America, for another hundred years.Think about THAT for a while !
'Or else' what? Wind turbines make electricity.
maybe
Some words that you can make out of the word watermelons are renewals, stoneware, stemware, earnest, eternal, mentor, monsters, and many more.
Watermelons themselves do not generate electricity, but they can be used in experiments to produce a small amount of electrical current. This is achieved by using the fruit as a medium in a simple electrochemical cell, typically involving metal electrodes inserted into the watermelon. The natural sugars and acids in the watermelon facilitate a chemical reaction that can produce a tiny voltage. However, this is not a practical method for generating usable electricity.
No, that does not even make sense! yoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyo
I like watermelons, plus, pie.
WATERMELONS ORIGONATE FROM THE AFRICAN DESERTS
watermelons arent always organic
Watermelons reproduce through pollination, where pollen from male flowers is transferred to female flowers by insects like bees. The female flower then develops into a fruit containing seeds. These seeds can be planted to grow new watermelon plants.
the mass of 10 watermelons is 90kg
brains, watermelons
The city of Hermiston, Oregon is famous for their watermelons.
yes, watermelons do have vitamins. they have vitamin A and C for eysight and the brain.