Cabbage leaf can photosynthesize because it has chlorophyll. Also red cabbage can photosynthesize too. Absolutely, red cabbages have chlorophyll, but it masked by other pigments. (anthocyanins)
Cabbage is a beautiful light green and is a leaf vegetable. There are different varieties too.
A cabbage ball kind of looks like lettuce except in ball form.
The now-common cabbage plant came from a leaf plant namd wild mustard plant. There is no certain person that discovered the edible cabbage, but it has been native in th Mditerranean since times of the ancient Romans and Greeks.
No. Cabbage is negatively geotropic . The only part of the plant that is normally eaten is the leafy head; more precisely, the spherical cluster of immature leaves, excluding the partially unfolded outer leaves.
Napa or nappa cabbage (Brassica rapa pekinensis) is a member of the mustard, or Brassicaceae, family. It is a type of Chinese cabbage that is also known as Peking cabbage, Chinese leaf, celery cabbage, wong nga bok, siu choy, hakusai, pechay, tsina, and pai-tsai. The name "nappa" comes from Japanese, where nappa (菜っ葉) refers to leafy green vegetables. The flavor is sweeter than green cabbage. The leaves are long and crispy.
cabbage leaf
yes there is a type of cassava that is compound
Cabbage is a beautiful light green and is a leaf vegetable. There are different varieties too.
Leaves reproduce so they can photosynthesize.
All leaves that photosynthesize have chlorophyll.
leaf
no but may be yah
Wild cabbage is a leaf vegetable.
Cabbage leaves have reticulate venation, which means the veins form a network pattern throughout the leaf.
Cabbage is actually a leaf. A cabbage patch is a play which grows 30 leafs per stem. Each leaf is grown till ripe then removed from the stem and wrap into a "ball" to save space and to keep the moisture inside.
Cabbage
no but may be yah