Yes, it can a bacteria can move buy using cilla, pseudopod, or flagellum. cillias are little hairs that stick out and move to push the bacteria, pseudopod are bacteria that extend a portion of their body to move and flagellum are whip like things that push side to side to move forward.
Virus doesn't move on it's own. It clings onto surfaces, and people who touch those surfaces have it on their hands. Of course it transports via wind and sneezing too.
In the body, it moves through clinging onto cells. (bloodstream, for example, with millions of moving cells)
It inserts DNA into the cell, and that cell is signaled to produce virus's, so the cell is currently fill with virus in it, and then it bursts, the virus again clings onto another cell and begins mass producing more virus's.
They cannot move with their own will, but rather are transported by their hosts.
If you mean the T-virus, this is a game. If you mean human T-lymphotropic virus, this is virus that causes cancer and is related to HIV. But viruses are not alive and do not move.
No, they do not. They are not alive and can not move on their own.
Tirogical
no it only will if you click on a virus
Human T-Lymphotropic Virus
T virus
For information about the Resident Evil T-Virus, Planet Resident Evil has a complete explanation of the history of the virus and how it is expanded upon in each game.
Rabies virus travel physically along the nerves by division of virus.
Yes, as long as a virus isn't pretending to be a song in itunes you can move your songs over safely.
Rabies Virus.
Helper T Cells
As far as I know Resident Evil 0, 1, 2 and 3 are the games that are about the T-Virus.
B cells mark the virus or paracite as unknown the killer t cells attack and destroy the virus.
B cells mark the virus or paracite as unknown the killer t cells attack and destroy the virus.