No Ferns are not annuals, annuals are angiosperms which have a short life-cycle (one season/ year or less).
Ferns belong to the Plantae division Pteridophyta
anual
An annual plant grows for one year and dies with the first hard freeze, never to return. A perennial plant comes back every year (tree, grass) and a biannual plant lives for two years.
Ferns are typically perennial plants, meaning they live for several years and can grow back each season. In contrast, mushrooms, which are the fruiting bodies of fungi, can be annual, perennial, or even biannual, depending on the species. While some mushrooms may appear only for a single growing season, others can produce fruiting bodies year after year under suitable conditions. Overall, the life cycle of each depends on the specific type of fern or mushroom.
A bead fern is another name for a sensitive fern - a coarse-textured, medium-large deciduous perennial fern, Latin name Onoclea sensibilis.
Yes asparagus is a perennial vegetable. It will grow each spring for 20-25 years.
Biannual used in a sentence would be, "payments are going to be biannual". Biannual means that something is going to occur every two years.
If an event keeps on occurring that means the event is at least annual. If it occurs more than once a year that makes the event perennial or biannual if it only occurs twice.
equinax
You will be in charge of the company's biannual recognition reception this upcoming June.
The Biannual Student Magazine
A biannual event is something that occurs twice a year.
The answer to this question is simple the affix of biannual is annual the suffix or prefix is bi