Perennials can be transplanted in the fall until about 6 weeks before the ground freezes to ensure their survival.
Dahlias are perennials, meaning they come back year after year without needing to be replanted.
The gallbladder is not essential - you can live without it quite easily (like your appendix). So it is never transplanted since it is not necessary. And when having a liver transplant, the gallbladder (both the original and the transplanted) are removed. Nobody with a liver transplant has a gall-bladder.
Perennials such as lamb's ear (Stachys byzantina), lungwort (Pulmonaria), and coral bells (Heuchera) are popular for their soft, fuzzy, and stingless foliage. These plants add texture and interest to garden beds without the risk of irritation when touched.
Nope.
Winston Churchill said Without victory there is no survival
wear a garden glove
Yes
There is no transplant for Crohn's disease. (The large intestine is never transplanted since you can live without it. The small intestine can be transplanted, but it does not cure Crohn's disease).
To hourly employees, yes. To salaried employees, not without risking litigation.
No. They can not enter the uterus without risking miscarriage. There is also no ovulation during pregnancy.
The organ essential for human survival that cannot be lived without is the heart.
Hot glass can be cooled down without risking breakage by gradually reducing its temperature using a process called annealing. This involves slowly cooling the glass in a controlled environment to relieve internal stresses and prevent cracking.