No
no. It has parallel veins.
No
No
corn leaves have parallel veins
Corn leaves typically have parallel venation, meaning that the veins run parallel to each other along the length of the leaf. Dicot leaves, on the other hand, have a branching network of veins that spread out from a central midrib. Additionally, corn leaves are generally longer and narrower compared to the broader shape of dicot leaves.
Yes, they do!
they have parallel veins...
In parallel venation, the veins are all smaller in size and parallel or nearly parallel to one another, although a series of smaller veins connects the large veins. Parallel venation occurs in the leaves of nearly all monocotyledonous Angiosperms, whose embryos have one cotyledon, as in flowering plants such as lillies and grasses
Corn has leaves with parallel venation as it is monocotyledonous
Corn plant
It's seed does not have two cotyledons. The leaves have veins that go upward, not branching out from a thick, center midrib(the center vein in most leaves) ~Those are the main reasons of why a corn is a monocot.
it may slip out of the net. So no.