The dark seed looking things are in fact seeds; undeveloped ones.
A little background:
Wild bananas are diploid (two sets of chromosomes per nucleus)
Most cultivated bananas are triploid (three sets of chromosomes per nucleus) rendering them parthenocarpic (seedless) and incapable of sexual reproduction (sterile)
Wild bananas in fact form seeds, which are rather large and hard, and result in a banana which is not as easy to eat, hence we have seedless varieties and the elaborate means of reproducing them through shoots, root portions, or tissue culture.
bananas ripen faster in a cool dark place
Black spots inside bananas are typically caused by a natural process called enzymatic browning, where enzymes in the fruit react with oxygen in the air, leading to the formation of dark pigments.
No. Optimistic (looking at the bright side of things) is the antonym of pessimistic (looking at the dark side of things.)
No they don't .
Yes
Dark chocolate, oysters, garlic and bananas.
the banana will get brwn all over.
Probably because you are either inside a building, looking at your feet or wearing very dark sunglasses.
Personification. A simile would compare two things, such as, "The library was as dark as the inside of a coal mine at midnight," or "The library was as quiet as inside the losing team's bus heading home."
yes alaska goes dark in the winter
Bananas are fruit as they have seeds. This may be hard to believe but first a banana originally has big seeds, so at that time, they're called fruits. Over time the seeds shrink into the little dark things we see in them today. Hence, a banana is not a fruit nor a vegetable, A banana is actually a herb
In many women, there are small bulges on the areola, which are called Montgomery bodies.