Plants that entwine or wrap around supports are commonly referred to as "climbing plants" or "vines." These plants use various methods, such as twining, tendrils, or adhesive pads, to attach themselves to structures as they grow upward. Examples include ivy, morning glories, and grapevines. Climbing plants are often used in gardening and landscaping to create vertical interest and cover walls or trellises.
A person that grows plants is called a farmer.
No, because not all plants are trees.
Air plants.
Plants that cross pollinate are called hybrids.
Plants that store water in tissue are called succulent plants.
A garland of flowers can be called a wreath. When you entwine something together you wreathe it.
Karamu [絡む] is to entwine.
Gone - Entwine album - was created in 2001.
The homophone for a garland of flowers is "wreath." "To entwine" has a homophone which is "twine."
The homophones for "a garland of flowers" are "lei" and "lay". The homophones for "to entwine" are "intwine" and "in twine".
wrap
Embrace/ Encircle
Entwine - 2012 was released on: USA: 2012 (San Francisco Frameline International LGBT Film Festival)
heehee, that sounds dirty!
There isn't any. Unless you count the slurred pronunciation when your bottle of Merlot is empty: "endwine"! Or if you are a big fan of Lord of the Rings, you could imagine a wine that is made by the Ents, called Ent Wine.
wreathe/wreath * * * * * A homophone is another word that sounds the same but has a different spelling. I cannot work out how wreathe nor wreath can be made to sound like entwine.
wreath and wreathe