a human is obviouly multicellular, because we have more than one cell.
No. Absolutely not. Whatever gave you that idea?
It is multicellular
Multicellular.
amoeba-uni human-multi
Well, multicellular and unicellular organisms vary greater in differences. For starters, multicellular organisms have multiple cells, hence the name, while unicellular organisms are single-celled. Also, multi-cellular organisms are in animals, humans, and plants, while single-celled organisms are mainly found only in bacteria and often fungus. Lastly, multi-cellular organisms are composed n tissues, organs, and organ systems while single-celled organisms stand alone; hence the name.
If the person is a human being then multicellular.
The gametic life cycle exists in which the haploid form is always unicellular as in humans.
A good example of unicellular cells would be bacteria, while multicellular cells would be like a sponge. Unicellular cells consist of only one cell surviving on it's own while multicellular cells are working together for a purpose.
uni cellular organisams have only one cell while multicellular organisms have multiple.
Euglena are unicellular organisms. They are microscopic, single-celled organisms that are often found in freshwater environments.
The scientific term for unicellular organisms is "unicellular organisms" or "unicellular organisms."
Unicellular means having single cell. Eg.-bacteria,yeast,etc and multicellular means having more than one cell. Eg.-animals,human beings,etc.....