The apple is the fruit or seed capsule of the apple tree.
The seed are produced for procreation. It just happens that we can eat them.
Applejack has spent her entire life on an apple farm and works with apples almost every day. It would be difficult for her to live such a life if she didn't love apples.
1)When life gives you apples.... trade them for lemons and make lemonade 2)An apple a day keeps the doctor away 3)How about them apples?
Think of 1+1 in a real life situation. If you have 1 apple, and a friend gives you another apple, you have 2 apples (1 apple+ 1 apple= 2 apples). If it a situation in maths....i.e., not a general thinking
The imagery of apples in Robert Frost's poem "After Apple-Picking" symbolizes the cycle of life, the passage of time, and the burden of unfulfilled desires.
In Steve Jobs' early life he worked in a Californian farm picking and growing Apples. He spent many years of his life working there and it must have and and influence on his decision for the company name.
Studying apple physics helps us understand how apples move, deform, and interact with their environment. It provides insights into the structural properties of apples, such as their firmness, elasticity, and juiciness. By analyzing the forces and energies involved in apple behavior, we can improve storage, transportation, and processing methods, ultimately enhancing the quality and shelf life of apples for consumers.
Well, isn't that just a happy little question! The opposite, or antonym, of an apple could be something like "absence of apple" or maybe "non-apple." Just imagine a world where apples and non-apples coexist in perfect harmony, each bringing their own unique beauty to the canvas of life.
`No, because apples depend on what state of life it is on if its not ripe yet or if its not even a apple yet or what kind of apple it is or where its from but im only eleven so im just a child but my answer is still good.
The tree would not be damaged as in nature no one picks the fruit. The apples will drop when ripe and the tree will continue it's life cycle.
At first he was going to steal an apple to save her, because the witch tempted him. But he resisted and said no. After giving the apple to Aslan, he used it to plant a tree to protect Narnia. From that tree grew apples and Aslan gave one of those to Digory. Unlike the original apples, it would not provide eternal life, butit did heal his mother when he gave it to her.
In the poem "After Apple-Picking" by Robert Frost, apple picking symbolizes the passage of time, the burden of life's responsibilities, and the inevitability of mortality. The act of picking apples reflects the speaker's reflections on his life and the choices he has made, as well as his contemplation of death and the afterlife.
If you were to cut an apple in half cross sectionally you would find that an apple has five compartments. Each of these compartments should include a seed in order for the apple to be full sized and well shaped as the seeds produce hormones which allow the fruit to develop. Fruit which lack seeds often abort from the tree in times of stress. Varieties can have more than one seed in each carpel depending on the health and vigor of the tree. The healthier a tree is, the more potential seed the fruit can have per carpel. If you want to produce a certain type of apple it is not probable to do this by planting a seed from the wanted type. The seed will have DNA from the apple that the seeds came from, but it will also have DNA from the apple flower that pollinated the seeds, which may well be a different type. This means that the tree which would grow from planting would be a mixture of two. In order to grow a certain type of apple, a small twig, or 'scion', is cut from the tree that grows the type of apple desired, and then added on to a specially grown stump called a rootstock. The tree that grows will only create apples of the type needed. *Plants usually produce far more seeds than are needed. This is because many seeds don't survive and grow to maturity.