When ordinary plants bloom, the receptacle holds the bright flowers high to attract bees and butterflies, while the receptacle of figs is particularly large, and the fruits we see grow out of it, which is the so-called "fake fruit". Those little flowers are hidden in the receptacle, so we can't see them from the outside. If you cut the fig with a knife and observe it carefully with a magnifying glass, you can see that there are many small protrusions in the middle of the "fruit". These are fig flowers. Although these flowers are small, they are also divided into male flowers and female flowers. They grow in different receptacles and are pollinated by an insect called the mountain bee. Only female flowers can bear true fruit, and each female flower can bear a small fruit, and the fruit is all wrapped in fake fruit. When we eat figs, we sometimes bite small particles like sand, that is, the seeds of figs.