On the assumption that you mean the actual gasses that compose the air, then it's not living. But if you include some of the dust and stuff that floats in the air, then pollen and other such things are living.
air is nonliving
air is nonliving
air is a non-living thing because it is not an organism and it has no cells.
Air is considered a non-living thing. It is a mixture of gases like nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and others that are essential for living organisms, but air itself does not have the characteristics of living things such as growth, reproduction, or metabolism.
A non living "thing" cannot move without a living thing or a force moving it.
Wind is considered non-living because it does not possess characteristics of living organisms, such as cells, metabolism, growth, or reproduction. Wind is simply the movement of air caused by the uneven heating of the Earth's surface by the sun.
There is no such thing as a non-living organism. If an organism is not living, it is dead. There are such things as abiotic (non-living) factors, however: soil, sand, rocks, water, air.
No, because some of the non living components are air, water and food without humans cannot survive
non living things
water air ect.
Non-living things have no needs because they are "non-living" as in they are not alive. An example of a non-living thing would be a coffee mug. Living things have a number of needs, the two most important being water and air.
Non-living - "air" is just a collection of gases.