Possible Questions:
- Flowerless plant
- Plant with fronds
- House plant
- Forest growth
- Office plant
- Brake
- Terrarium plant
- Nonflowering plant
- Seedless plant
- Popular houseplant
- Water-loving houseplant
- Frond bearer
- Forest plant
- Spore producer
- Maidenhair, e.g.
- Fronded plant
- Frond-bearing plant
- Common houseplant
- "Charlotte's Web" girl
- Popular office plant
- Parlor plant
- Maidenhair, for one
- Flowerless decorative plant
- Bracken
- Bouquet greenery
- Bouquet enhancer
- Terrarium plant, perhaps
- Spore-producing plant
- Seedless flora
- Potted plant
- Polypody
- Plant with triangular fronds
- Non-flowering plant
- Florist's staple
- Fiddlehead, for one
- Feathery plant
- Everglades plant
- Crayola color since 1998
- Common office plant
- Common office decoration
- Common house plant
- Brake or bracken
- Bracken, for one
- Bit of office greenery
- Bit of greenery
- Bit of green in a floral display
- Bit of a florist's greenery
- Woods plant
- Spore source
- Shedder of spores
- Shade plant
- Seedless, flowerless plant
- Seedless bit of flora
- Pteridologist's specimen
- Pot plant
- Popular house gift
- Plant without seeds or flowers
- Plant with fiddleheads
- Plant with a frond
- Plant that reproduces by spores
- Plant in the office
- Plant in a 1970s bar
- Office growth
- Non-flowering office staple
- Moonwort, for one
- Maidenhair or bracken
- Lobby plant
- Living-room plant
- Lacy houseplant
- It's often potted
- Iron and Wine "Resurrection ___"
- Houseplant
- Green in a vase, perhaps
- Green Crayola color
- Girl in "Charlotte's Web"
- Fossil impression
- Forest floor flora
- Flowerless, seedless plant
- Filiform forest flora
- Decorative plant
- Dakota Fanning's role in "Charlotte's Web"
- Corsage greenery
- Common green house gift
- Club moss's kin
- Christmas or Boston
- Certain spore, later
- Certain cryptogam
- Bracken, e.g.
- Bracken or brake
- Bouquet extra
- Boston is one variety
- Boring, drab plant
- Best-selling romance author Michaels
- Adder's-tongue, e.g.
- Adder's-tongue or Venus's-hair
- "Where the Red ___ Grows"
- "Frondly" plant?
- "___ Hill," D. Thomas poem