If a living organism is only one cell, then it is unicellular. Any singular bacterium serves as an example.
Yes it is: Both living and unicellular
Unicellular
any living thing-meaning unicellular and multicellular systems
The term is unicellular or acellular
No. While pretty much any living thing you can see without a microscope is multicellular, most living things are actually unicellular.
every living thing has cells so a catfish would have cells
It is called an unicellular microorganism. Protoctist are examples.
A desert rose is a rosette formation of the minerals gypsum and barite, it is neither unicellular nor multi-cellular as it is not a living thing.
An organism (a living thing ... plant or animal) that consists of a single cell. Like an amoeba or a paramecium.
An organism (a living thing ... plant or animal) that consists of a single cell. Like an amoeba or a paramecium.
All the functions of a unicellular organsim must be carried out in its one cell where as in a multicellular organism (if it is large enough) cells are specialized.
im a house cat and i took a dump in that pond