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STEM

A stem is the main axis of a vascular plant that supports leaves, flowers, and fruit and houses tissues for transport of water, minerals, and sugars. It consists of nodes and internodes, with vascular tissue organized in xylem and phloem. An apical meristem at the tip produces lengthwise growth (primary growth); in woody plants, a lateral meristem called cambium adds girth (secondary growth). Stems may be herbaceous or woody and may store resources.

Diversity: Underground stems include rhizomes; horizontal stems. Stolons or runners spread above ground. Tubers, bulbs and

In linguistics, the stem is the base form of a word to which affixes attach, as in

corms
are
specialized
storage
stems.
Leaves
and
buds
arise
from
nodes,
with
terminal
buds
controlling
growth.
The
arrangement
of
stems
varies
by
plant
habit.
teach
from
which
teacher
and
teaching
are
derived.
In
typography,
the
stem
is
the
vertical
stroke
of
a
letter.
In
biology,
stem
cells
are
undifferentiated
cells
capable
of
self-renewal
and
differentiation
into
various
cell
types.
The
acronym
STEM
stands
for
science,
technology,
engineering,
and
mathematics.