Yes, monks rooms are called cells. They are not like prisoner cells, but they aren't luxury either. They have all the basic things that they need to live in their cells.
Hooke looked at dead cells. The ones he saw were from fossil rocks. He called them cells because they looked the the small rooms of monks called cells.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
He observed a piece of cork under the microscope he invented. He noticed the small chambers which resembled the rooms monks lived in called 'cells'.
The microscope was first invented and used by Robert Hooke. He looked at slices of cork under the microscope and noticed that they look like the little rooms that monks used. These were called cells. And so came the term cells for what makes up tissues.
When viewing a cork through his homemade microscope Robert Hook discovered small compartments that he called cells.
Robert Hooke discovered cells in the bark of a specific tree called cork. They reminded him of rooms or compartments. and thats why he called them cells
Hooke looked at dead cells. The ones he saw were from fossil rocks. He called them cells because they looked the the small rooms of monks called cells.
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
Robert Hooke called them 'cells' because they reminded him of the small rooms of monks (cells).
First cells were seen and described by Robert Hooke. He first looked at cork cells under a simple microscope, he noted that that cells look like tiny rooms that monks lived in. These tiny rooms were called cells and that's the reason for the name.
Robert Hooke looked at cork with a microscope. He noticed little boxes that he called "rooms" or "cells". Monks and other religious people lived in small cells or rooms.
Robert Hooke is attributed with observing the first cells in the 17th century. He named them cells because they reminded him of the rooms that monks lived in inside a monastery, which were called cells.
Robert Hooke noticed, while using a microscope, that he could see "cells" in cork. These were like the little rooms that monks slept in and were called cells.
A cell (or cubicle).
Monks rooms are called hashi minus They're not like prisoner cells, but they weren't luxury either. They had all the basic things that they needed to live.
He observed a piece of cork under the microscope he invented. He noticed the small chambers which resembled the rooms monks lived in called 'cells'.
they had two diffrent diining rooms because the oblate monks and the novice monks ate in two diffrent rooms