Ginger is not a non-flowering plant; it is a flowering plant. It belongs to the Zingiberaceae family and produces small, attractive flowers that typically bloom in clusters. The part commonly used as a spice is actually the rhizome, which grows underground. Overall, ginger is classified as a herbaceous perennial that can produce flowers.
It is a flowering plant.
No, it is a flowering plant.
Watermelon is a flowering plant. It produces flowers that eventually develop into the fruit.
A tomato is a flowering plant. It produces flowers which then develop into fruits, such as tomatoes.
no
Yes it is
Yes it is
Yes, it is a monocotyledonous flowering plant
flowering plant
It depends. If the wild ginger your talking about is a spice, then yes. The spice ginger comes from a flower. But not red ginger also known as ginger flower or alpinia purpurata. Hmmm...well if you are talking about spice ginger, then it is a flowering plant. The ginger comes from the tuber which it grows underground. The ginger you see in the supermarket is called Jamaican ginger. The problem here is the word flower. a flower is only part of a plant but in common usage has become the word for flowering plant. In answer to the question I think, wild ginger is a plant that has flowers.
It is a flowering plant.
No, it is a flowering plant.
Non flowering.
corn is a flowering monocotyledonous plant
Dieffenbachia is a flowering dicotyledonous plant
Allamanda is a flowering plant
Bamboo is a non-flowering plant