Non-organic cotton primarily comes from conventional cotton farming practices, which often involve the use of synthetic pesticides, fertilizers, and genetically modified seeds. This type of cotton is typically grown in countries like the United States, India, China, and Pakistan, where large-scale agricultural operations are common. The cultivation process can lead to significant environmental impacts, including soil degradation and water resource depletion.
Synthetic hair
Cotton dresses come from the cotton ball of a flower
They come from places where there are both, cotton and polyester.
The word is variously spelled as one word "nonorganic" or hyphenated "non-organic" which is a specialized informal term because the true opposite of organic is inorganic. Neither is in most spell-checkers.
Cotton fibres come from cotton plants -- that is the base.
No, it comes from a cotton plant.
The cotton plant is a shrub.
Cotton is grown in fields. Not from an animal.
Cotton
Cotton comes off a bush.
Cotton comes from a plant, which is a shrub.
"Raw" cotton means cotton that is unginned.