Flagellum
A Eukaryotic cell does not have a flagellum.
Plants .
It is called the Flagellum :D Flagellum- a long whiplike outgrowth from a cell that acts as an organ.
Anterior
It is the animal cell.
NO i think in only animal. because flagellum and cilia moves the cell, but plants can't move.
Flagellum
plasmamembrane
In animal cells: cilia (many cilia per cell) In bacterial cells: flagella (only one per cell)
Flagellum can be found in some prokaryote and eukaryote cells but not in plant cells. Plant cells have cell walls to provide rigidness and that would contrast with flagellum, which purpose is to allow flexibility and movement.
Yes it is - the differences between plant and animal cells are essentially that plant cells have a cell wall and chloroplast (which animal cells do not have) and animal cells have centrioles (which help to make up the cytoskeleton of the cell, and which plant cells do not have). You can say in general that plant cells do not have flagellum, where animal cells do, but there are flagellum on plant reproductive cells. So just say that somatic (non-reproductive cells) plant cells do not have flagellum.
no
flagellates
yes they do
yes
A Eukaryotic cell does not have a flagellum.