Technically yes, because that would mean they have no cells to live on.
Yes, things that are dead still have cells. These cells begin to die after somatic death (whole body death).
If you mean the things floating around inside your eye, it is just dead skin cells. Very common
yes its red and white blood cells that have died inside you and the vessels and systems they are in lead them to these locations Actually, hair and nails are made up of dead skin cells that have been filled with keratin. They are not dead blood cells.
any type of dead wood or dead plants still have cells any type of organic material used for human use will still have cells.
They are made of cells as wellfor example:tables are made of dead plants cells!!well tree are made of tabel and animals are made of food
A layer of new cells is always better than a layer of old and dead cells. If your skin is dead then it wont be protecting you, instead it will spread the necrosis to your inside body parts and ultimately you'll either scar a lot or die. Nothing dead is every helpful to the body (hence why dead cells are always "recycled" and then flushed out of the body).
No. They are made out of living and dead cells.
cells... but inside the cells, the Golgi apparatus.. think of it as a post office... it packages and ships things out of a cell into the human body
Generally Human Cheek cells (as with skin cells) are dead on the outermost layers, and still alive on the deeper layers. So the cheek cells are dead even before you take them out of your mouth.
The main difference is that bacterial DNA is not enclosed inside of a membrane-bound nucleus but instead resides inside the bacterial cytoplasm.
as dust is dead skin cells dust can only be found where things are living.
Inside a lung cell is cytoplasm and inside that are things called ribosomes. These are the things that synthesize proteins or manufacture proteins which go into the mucus.HOPE THIS HELPS!