No they are not.
The Golgi apparatus (GA), also called Golgi body or Golgi complex and found universally in both plant and animal cells, is typically comprised of a series of five to eight cup-shaped, membrane-covered sacs called cisternae that look something like a stack of deflated balloons. In some unicellular flagellates, however, as many as 60 cisternae may combine to make up the Golgi apparatus. Similarly, the number of Golgi bodies in a cell varies according to its function. Animal cells generally contain between ten and twenty Golgi stacks per cell, which are linked into a single complex by tubular connections between cisternae. This complex is usually located close to the cell nucleus.
Ribosomes are mainly found bound to the endoplasmic reticulum and the nuclear envelope, as well as freely scattered throughout the cytoplasm, depending upon whether the cell is plant, animal, or bacteria. The organelles serve as the protein production machinery for the cell and are consequently most abundant in cells that are active in protein synthesis, such as pancreas and brain cells. Some of the proteins synthesized by ribosomes are for the cell's own internal use, especially those that are produced by free ribosomes. Many of the proteins produced by bound ribosomes, however, are transported outside of the cell.
Yes
Yes I think so. The Golgi seems to have a few different names, it is also commonly referred to as the Golgi apparatus but they all mean the same thing!
no because golgi complex is a collective.
They all are the same
They are the same thing.
They are the SAME THING
They have the same color as the Cellular Cytoplasm.
No, they are not the same thing. Ribosomes make proteins (protein synthesis).
Dictyosomes of plants and lower invertebrates are the same as the Golgi. It is an alternative term.
a mail room
The same thing it is for in all cells. The ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
Yes, the Gogli aperatus and Gogli complex are two terms for the same thing.