yes
No, orange trees are flowering plants. They belong to the Rutaceae family and produce fragrant white flowers that eventually develop into oranges.
I'm quite sure of it because as orange is a fruit and plants do not grow multiple fruits. I have seen this in nagpur, that whenever i visited there the orange trees blossomed with oranges in the month of summers
Gluttony is the deadly sin of excessive consumption. It is associated with the color orange because of how excessively orange trees produce fruit.
Orange trees grow in orchards specifically designated for citrus fruits. These orchards have conditions tailored for citrus tree growth, including suitable soil composition, climate, and sunlight exposure required to produce healthy orange trees.
Trees that drop large green fruit in the fall could be pawpaw trees (Asimina triloba) or Osage orange trees (Maclura pomifera). Pawpaw trees produce large, greenish-yellow fruit that is custard-like in texture and sweet in taste. Osage orange trees produce large, green fruit that is inedible for humans but is commonly eaten by wildlife like squirrels and birds.
Orange trees.
No. It just becomes a lemon with orange juice inside it. It's still a lemon and its seeds will still produce nothing but lemon trees.
The Tulip Popular is the official state tree in Tennessee. Maple, Hickories, and Hackberry are common in Tennessee. Other trees in Tennessee include Sycamore, Oak, and Hawthorn.
Trees manufactures orange.
Orange trees are most subject to sudden frost exposure.
Oranges come in a variety of sizes. It the orange is a large one, it just means that the orange was grown in a specific orchard where the oranges came out large. Some varieties of orange trees typically produce large oranges.