a human is obviouly multicellular, because we have more than one cell.
No. Absolutely not. Whatever gave you that idea?
It is multicellular
Multicellular.
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.
amoeba-uni human-multi
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.....