I sowed a pie dish full of ordinary, grocery store-bought sesame seeds, added a bit of soil over them, watered the dish and kept it covered in a a warm, sunny place - and now it's full of happy little sproutlings, so I'd say yes, they do grow. Of course, it depends on your batch of seeds; some may react very well to being planted, while some might not grow at all. The level to which the seeds have been treated is likely a factor. The sproutlings seem to like the sun, but they can dry up easily, and they don't like too much water either, but all in all they seem to possess a lot of vitality.
Sesame seeds turn into a paste called Tahini when ground. It is used in many near and far east recipes.
Karnataka
Not if it has been heated in any way.
When a plant starts to grow from a seed we say the seed germinates.
You can grow in both using the seed from where you go buy in store and from the seed or pollen of the plant
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You plant a seed, germinate it then plant it out.
A baby plant that grow into another plant.
You grow it...from a seed...it IS a plant after all...
you cant plant an apple seed an expect it to grow it doesn't grow at all its impossible for it to grow i know this because i tried it before
the answer is to put the soil,seed and water and it will grow:>
An oak tree.
plant the starfruit seed