i dont really know man
Pollination.
Of course, it's called 'Pollination'
There are a number of what scientists call a 'cereal grain', uncluding wheat, barley, oats, and so forth.
you can get it in a cream or ointment form at the drug store.
Short Answer:Not all forms of fungi either are mushrooms or produce what we call mushrooms.Mushrooms and toadstools are examples of fungi. The most familiar mushrooms are from club fungi.More:The group of organisms we call fungi, includes yeasts and molds as well as mushrooms.When most people see a sporocarp they call this a mushroom or toadstool. This fleshy fruiting body is only the visible part of the living organism that is popular for eating. The fruiting body only develops as part of the asexual phase of the fungal life cycle for spore production.
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Dried wheat is called straw, but technically 'straw' can be any dried cereal grain.
A stalk (or some people call it a rib) is one of the long pieces that are attached at the bottom of the head of celery. What most people call a "bunch of celery," the USDA calls a "stalk;" and what most people call a "stalk of celery," they call a "branch." One other term needs describing: "node," which is the point at which the first leaves or leafstems appear on a branch of celery.
A stalk
a grain of rice
There is no know name for a dried olive.
Most paper has what we call a "grain direction"; it used to be thought that the grain direction was due to paper fibers being aligned in that direction in the paper-making process, but current thinking is that it is more strongly related to what tension the paper was under as it dried. Handmade papers which were dried between felts often do not have a pronounced grain direction. When a paper does have a pronounced grain direction, as most modern machine-made papers do, it will bend or fold more easily with the grain than across it. If you dampen one side of such a paper, it will curl into a tube with the grain. Most commercial papers are sold "grain long" -- that is, the grain runs the long way, from top to bottom on the sheet. (Putting these things together, if you take a sheet of commercial US printer paper and dampen it on one side, it'll curl up with the grain, resulting in an 11-inch-long tube.)
A prune.
A "prune".
The outer covering of the grain is called Husk.
I think it's called stalk
hard tac