Recommend you organize the data sequentially; in time order.
Example:
A week = 7 days. So height now = 1.8m + 12Cm = 1.92 cm. the answer to this question is 15.72
It is not known how many people grew up as nudists, but making an inference based on observation only, the percentage of those who grew up as nudists is very small.
The verb for growth is grow. As in the action "to grow". In past tense, the verb is grew. As in the action "to have grew before".
Manny grew 4 inches. Jeff grew 1.5 times that amount, which is 6 inches (4 x 1.5). Allison grew 4.4 times Manny's growth, totaling 17.6 inches (4 x 4.4). Sarah grew 3.5 times Manny's growth, which is 14 inches (4 x 3.5). In order from shortest to tallest: Manny (4 inches), Jeff (6 inches), Sarah (14 inches), and Allison (17.6 inches).
none
You grew that giant sunflower?
No one it grew naturally.
It grew a lot
It grew rapidly once the right to organize was protected by law.
1.92 m
They were acquired by Klein Brothers Wholesale, and now are marketed as Jumbo Sunflower Seeds
The crops they grew were maize, barley, sunflower, squash, goosefoot, may grass, and wheat.
No one knows who first discovered the sunflower. Sunflowers have been around for over 8,000 years. There is evidence that Native Americans grew sunflowers in 2300 BC. They ground the seeds into flour and used the oil when baking bread.
A week = 7 days. So height now = 1.8m + 12Cm = 1.92 cm. the answer to this question is 15.72
Tulips need to go in the ground in the fall and need to be in for at least 12 weeks in really cold temps to start to grow. If you are planting them in a pot in soil and put them in the fridge for at least 12 weeks then take them out.
Early and modern Choctaw Indians consumed agricultural products they grew which included corn (maize), beans, sweet potatoes, sunflower seeds, cabbage and leeks.
The marigolds my grandmother grew around her garden were flowers of the sunflower family. There is also a marsh marigold, but I wouldn't call any of them shrubs, which are characterized by woody stems.