I sowed a pie dish full of ordinary, grocery store-bought sesame seeds, added a bit of soil over them, watered the dish and kept it covered in a a warm, sunny place - and now it's full of happy little sproutlings, so I'd say yes, they do grow. Of course, it depends on your batch of seeds; some may react very well to being planted, while some might not grow at all. The level to which the seeds have been treated is likely a factor. The sproutlings seem to like the sun, but they can dry up easily, and they don't like too much water either, but all in all they seem to possess a lot of vitality.
Karnataka
Not if it has been heated in any way.
When a plant starts to grow from a seed we say the seed germinates.
You can grow in both using the seed from where you go buy in store and from the seed or pollen of the plant
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The sesame seed did 15 extra math problems because it wanted to prove that it could be more than just a small ingredient. Motivated by its desire to show off its skills and contribute to the larger dish, the sesame seed embraced the challenge. Plus, it believed that exercising its brain would help it grow in knowledge, just as it would grow into a healthy plant.
You plant a seed, germinate it then plant it out.
No, half a seed cannot grow. A seed needs to be intact in order to germinate and grow into a plant. Cutting a seed in half would prevent it from being able to sprout and develop into a plant.
A baby plant that grow into another plant.
The term for a seed that starts to grow into a plant is germination. During germination, the seed absorbs water, swells, and eventually sprouts to form a new plant.
You grow it...from a seed...it IS a plant after all...
you cant plant an apple seed an expect it to grow it doesn't grow at all its impossible for it to grow i know this because i tried it before