No, it's a vegetable plant. Carrots flower after the second year in the ground. So if you do not dig up the carrot it will flower. It looks like a Queen Ann's Lace wild flower. As a matter of fact if you dig up a Queen Anne's' Lace, you will find a "wild Carrot". Totally edible but not very tender.
Lovage
A carrot is a flowering plant, specifically a biennial herb that belongs to the Apiaceae family. While we typically consume the root of the carrot, it produces flowers in its second year of growth. These flowers are usually small and white, forming umbrella-shaped clusters called umbels.
Carrots are root vegetables and roots are not the part of the plant that produces seeds.The carrot plant is a flowering plant and the flowers once fertilized with carrot pollen produce carrot seeds.
Yes, it is a monocotyledonous flowering plant
flowering plant
No, a carrot is not a gymnosperm; it is a flowering plant classified as an angiosperm. Gymnosperms are seed-producing plants that do not form flowers or fruits, such as conifers. Carrots belong to the Apiaceae family and are cultivated for their edible roots.
corn is a flowering monocotyledonous plant
It is a flowering plant.
Watermelon is a flowering plant. It produces flowers that eventually develop into the fruit.
Dieffenbachia is a flowering dicotyledonous plant
Allamanda is a flowering plant
Yes, it is a flowering plant.