Yes. A liver cell, along with every other body cells you have, are eukaryotic and contains a "true" nucleus.
No, a liver cell is a eukaryotic cell. Eukaryotic cells, like liver cells, have a well-defined nucleus that contains the cell's genetic material and are more complex than prokaryotic cells, which lack a nucleus.
There many examples of eukaryotic cells. All human cells are eukaryotic therefore any cell from our bodies can be an example, like hepatocytes (liver cells).
Eukaryotic Foo!
Yes, a liver cell is a type of somatic cell. Somatic cells are any cell in the body that is not a sperm or egg cell. Liver cells are an example of somatic cells because they make up the majority of the cells in the liver and are responsible for the organ's function.
No. Every last cow cell in a cow are eukaryotic.
Every eukaryotic cell contains a nucleus, which includes every cell in the human body.
Every plant cell is eukariotic.So every plant is a example
Mitochondria are found in almost all eukaryotic cells in the body, with higher concentrations in cells that have high energy demands like muscle cells and liver cells. They are commonly found near the cell's nucleus and throughout the cell's cytoplasm.
Simply a "Cell", in general, anyway... Eukaryotic cell is the name for a regular human body cell.
Any cell that is not a sex cell (sperm/egg). i.e. body cells, such as skin cells, stomach cells, liver cells
Blood cell, muscle cell. Prokaryotic cells, eukaryotic cells.
ALL the cells in your body is eukaryotic. Eukaryotic by definition is a cell with a nucleus. Because all the cells in your body have a nucleus, they are all considered to be eukaryotic. The skeletal muscle in your body is multinucleated, meaning that they have many nucleus. This, however, does not mean that they suddenly don't become anymore eukaryotic or anymore prokaryotic, because it still has a nucleus.