no! are you a clone of your parents no!
A pine is a conifer tree in the genus Pinus. They are also gymnosperms and do not produce flowers. Reproduction is by male and female cones on the same tree.
A truncated cone is basically a cone with it's tip cut off.
It is the net of a cone. -
If by "Time Cone" you mean a Light Cone (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_cone), then a light cone is a graphical construct depicting how causality (how event A can affect event B) works in the universe. The actual "cone" is a flash of light - the fastest any information in the universe can travel. Anything inside the cone (nearer to the time axis) can be influenced by (or can influence, depending on the orientation of the cone) an event occurring at the same time as the flash. Anything outside the cone (closer to the space axis) can neither influence nor be influenced by an event happening at the same time as the flash.
The default cone search radius is i arc minute.
In sexual reproduction an entirely new individual is produced. The genes are not exactly the same as either parent. In asexual reproduction the new individual is exactly the same as the parent. It is a cone of the parent.
The intersection of the cone and that particular plane is a parabola.
Reproduction because inside the pine cone, there are little seeds hiden near the comb.
No, it is a direct object.
direct drive
WHEN YOU PERFORM FELATTIO AND SHARE THE EJACULATION IN A KISS.
True
They play an important role, and are part of the process.the role of a cone in the reproduction of gymnosperms is to produce egg cells and sperm cells
True.
A person can calculate the volume of a cone by multiplying the height by pi and by the square of the radius of the cone, and then dividing the result of the previous operations by three.
If a right circular cone intersects a plane that runs parallel to the edge of the cone the result curve will be a parabola, unless the intersection includes the vertex of the cone, in which case the intersection is a straight line. This is a conic section. Depending on the angle of the plane, the section will be a circle, an ellipse, a parabola, or two hyperboles.
No, a cone is not a seedless plant. Cones are reproductive structures found on certain seed-producing plants like conifers. They contain seeds inside them, which are typically dispersed for reproduction.