Not at all. They can range from most plant cells that are generally rectangular, to skeletal muscle cells that are generally long and cylindrical, to epithelial and nerve cells that have no defined shape, to amoeboids that are constantly changing their shape. Almost any shape you can imagine, you can probably find a cell that almost matches it.
No, there are different shapes of cells
Example: Skin cells, Bacterial cells, Nerve cells, Egg cells and Plant cells.
it stays the same
No. Cells do not have the same size nor the same shape.
it means nothing, nothing at all!
Contain the cell's framework
its shape is spherical but it has the same organelles as the plant cell except for chloroplast and the cell wall.
No because animal cell has indefinite shape
an onion cell is a plant cell, in which plant cells are rectangular shape and so are onion cells
Inside of a cell it is the cell membrane which lets substances pass into the cell, and out. The cell wall is used to keep the shape of the cell the same.
Like all plant cells, a grass cell is rectangular. Animal cells are rounder. However, they both have the same contents.
The shape helps the root hair cell to move around the body, the nucleus helps the root hair cell, the root hair cell is about the same shape as a nerve cell
No, animal cell has a abnormal shape and a plant shape is square because it's cell wall holds it that shape.
No
it stays the same
No. They can vary depending on the plant, how much room it has and what it needs and where. The cells stay the same and the functions do but have different shapes. They mostly consist of a cell wall, a cell membrane, a nucleus, a vacuole, mitochondria and cytoplasm. There are more parts but they are the main ones.
the cell's shape helps it do its job because all of the organelles in the cell need all of the space they can get to have room to do jobs and such
Yes. All koalas are essentially the same shape.
No. Cells do not have the same size nor the same shape.