No, But they have a hard shell that can poke you.
the thorns is a structural adaption of rose,cactus,bamboo
The main physiological adaptation of the bamboo, the cactus, and the rose is their system of defense. Bamboo has ends that are sharp enough to penetrate the human body. It's the means by which some samurai committed suicide, in a painfully lingering but heroically reputed death, in Japan. The cactus has sharp ends in the form of modified leaves as thorns, spines, spikes, quills, prongs, needles, hairs, or bristles. The rose likewise has thorns, but as a supplement to and not as a replacement for leaves.
the stem
Well, a bamboo tattoo could be a tattoo of bamboo on the skin, but I think you are probably referring to the old way of tattooing with sharpened bamboo. The word tattoo comes from the Polynesian word tatau, which actually means to tap repeatedly. Still used in these modern times, but not so much, the process involved fixing a sharpened bamboo point to a flexible bamboo piece that was then tapped repeatedly with yet another piece of bamboo. This same style was used in other places with anything that could be shaped into a point, even rose thorns.
it was a crown of thorns. they twisted together thorns and pressed it into his head
their thorns
Ragweed does not have thorns.
it has thorns
Chrysanthemums do not have thorns.
Chrysanthemums do not have thorns.
If There Be Thorns was created in 1981.
The ISBN of If There Be Thorns is 0671729454.