Mrs. V Plants Hangman

 
hangman
                                       
                                                                                                                       
 
 

 
 

 
 

 
Teachers and Webmasters: Copy-and-paste the HTML code below into your web page to have the Hangman game displayed on your web page.


 

 
www.eapps.com




Copyright ©2001-2008 John Weidner All rights reserved.
About -  Terms of Service -  Privacy Statement



Flap 1 Flap 2
cellulose  chemical compound made by plants out of sugar  
cuticle  waxy, protective layer that covers the stems, leaves and flowers of many plants and prevents water loss  
vascular plant  plant with tubelike structures that move minerals, water and other substances throughout the plant  
nonvascular plant  plant that absorbs water and other substances directly through its cell walls  
rhizoids  threadlike structures that anchor nonvascular plants to the ground  
stomata  tiny openings in a plants epidermis through which carbon dioxide and water vapor gases enter and leave a leaf  
guard cell  pairs of cells that surround stomata and control their openings and closing  
gymnosperms  vascular plants that do not flower  
angiosperms  flowering vascular plants that produce fruit containing one or more seeds  
xylem  vascular tissue that forms hollow vessels that transport substances, other than sugar throughout a plant  
phloem  vascular tissue that forms tubes that transport dissolved sugar throughout a plant  
cambium  vascular tissue that produces xylem and phloem cells as a plant grows  
photosynthesis  food making process that takes place in the chloroplasts of plant cells  
chlorophyll  green, light trapping pigment in plant chloroplasts that is important to photosynthesis  
respiration  series of chemical reactions used to release energy stored in food molecules  
auxin  plant hormone that causes plant leaves and stems to exhibit positive phototropism  
tropism  positive or negative plant response to an external stimulus such as touch, light, or gravity  
photoperiodism  a plant's response to the lengths of daylight and darkness each day