Those sprouts you have in water are living on the tissue of the seed and will soon starve to death if you don't get them into some soil. Lentils are generally planted in the winter and harvested in late summer so you are okay in that respect. They will tolerate a little more cold than their cousins, peas and beans. I am not sure exactly how much one plant produces but commercially the harvest is a little over two thousand pounds of dried lentils per acre. I expect you may figure roughly a half pound yield per plant.
Lilly
A lily plant can typically live for about 3 to 5 years. However, with proper care and maintenance, some lilies have been known to live up to 20 years.
A tea plant can live for several decades if well cared for, with some tea plants living over 100 years. The productivity of the plant usually begins to decline after 50-60 years.
Thank u very much for answering the answer
Lentil
No, it's a plant.
lentil
\Lentil is the answer
lentil
As long as the plant has enough water in it, yes it will live As long as the plant has enough water in it, yes it will live
A lentil.
The word "lentil" in English means "patani" in Tagalog. This is only the closest word for lentil.
The plant lives as long as there is enough water in it to sustain it's metabolism.
it can live as much as 1,000,000 years
If a pitcher plant is cared for the plant will live for several years. The plants are carnivorous plants.
A lentil is not a fish, it is a bean