Chlorophyllis an extremely important biomolecule, critical in photosynthesis, which allows plants to absorb energy from light.Chlorophyll absorbs light most strongly in the blue portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, followed by the red portion.However, it is a poor absorber of green and near-green portions of the spectrum, hence the green color of chlorophyll-containing tissues.
The term "greenhouse" originates from the practice of using glass structures to cultivate plants in a controlled environment. The word itself combines "green," referring to the color associated with plants and growth, and "house," indicating a structure or shelter. Historically, these structures were designed to trap heat and light, creating an ideal climate for growing plants, especially in colder regions. Today, the concept has expanded to include various types of controlled-environment agriculture.
Its a word you may have heard before: agriculture. Recently, to distunguish soil CONTAINER growing from in-the-ground growing, the following terms have surfaced: agriponics or agroponics (us) terraponics (euro) bio (euro) Funny thing is, the "experts" can't really agree what the definitions of "hydroponics" and "aeroponics" are. For example, a very popular definition of hydroponics is "a growing system in which the plants receive all of their nutrition from the irrigation solution, as opposed to the soil or potting medium." Notice no mention is made of the substate (potting medium). This means that growing plants in any commercial potting mix (which use peat, coconut, vermiculite, perlite, compost, etc - none of which are soil) with a nutrient solution is hydroponics... even if you only water once a week or whatever. Aeroponics is even more wishy-washy. My point is that there is not a clear line that distinguishes one method from the other; most systems are really a fusion of two or more methods. The definition of hydroponics is literally working water...or as used today the science of growing plants without soil. So growing plants in a commercial potting mix containing peat, coconut, vermiculite, perlite is considered hydroponics. As is growing plants in sand or gravel or any inert media. Aeroponics is a form of hydroponics, it refers to growing plants with their roots suspended in the air and being misted, which is growing plants without soil or hydroponics. In my opinion it is a term that was coined to avoid the negative connotations associated with hydroponics.
Yes, the word 'green' is a noun, an adjective, and a verb.The noun 'green' is a word for a color; a word for an area of mown grass; a word for a thing.Examples:Noun: The village green is a place covered in grass that is shared by villagers.Adjective: He was wearing a green shirt.Verb: The city has budgeted to green the medians on Main Street.
The correct word is photosynthesis and not photothnsesis. Animals inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide. Green plants are the only plants that produce oxygen and make food, which is called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis means ''putting together with light.'' This takes place in chloroplasts, which have chlorophyll in them. Chlorophyll absorbs the sunlight. From sunlight, green plants combine carbon dioxide and water to make sugar and oxygen. Green plants use sugar to make starch, fats, and proteins. There are tiny pores called stomata. Oxygen and carbon dioxide enter and leave through the stomata.
The word moss is a noun. It is a selection of green plants growing on the ground.
Verdant means green and growing. It is an English word that we adopted from the Spanish word for green: green with grass.
evergreen tree
Chloroplast, it provides the green for plants, and the plants' food. Therefor, they call it "going Green" because of the color of our important plants
The colouring matter of green parts of many plants.
(collards are cabbage-like plants, Brassica oleraceaoften found growing wild outside their cultivated fields; they have edible green leaves)"The poorest of families in the South were sometimes forced to gather collards for food."
Hydro-tropism is a word for plants growing away from moisture. There are many plants which exhibit hydro-tropism.
It comes from an old French word verdoyant, meaning "growing". That word is related to modern Romance-language words referring to the color green.
The green pigment found in plants is chlorophyll, which produce food for the plant. In the Autumn, the chlorophyll starts to die (if that is the right word) and the leaves become brown, red, orange or yellow. In the Spring the plant retains its usual green colour.
One possible name for this ability could be "Greenery Empowerment." By invoking the word "green," you could channel energy or magic to accelerate the growth and vitality of nearby plants, causing them to flourish and thrive. This power taps into the essence of nature and enhances the natural processes of photosynthesis and growth.
The African Luhya word for the English word 'growing' is "okhukhula".
The base word for "growing" is "grow".