Yes, bacteria is the plural form and bacterium is the singular form.
biologically yes, grammatically no. Bacterium is the singular form of bacteria.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria. The plural possessive is bacteria's.(e.g. The bacteria's differing metabolisms make some more susceptible to the drugs.)
The singular form is bacterium; the plural form is bacteria.
Yes, the noun 'bacteria' is the plural form of the singular noun 'bacterium'.
In the same way that "geese" and "goose" are the same. Bacteria is the plural form of bacterium.
bacteria is plural and bacterium is singular
bacteria is, unless you were to use the word "The" in front (the bacteria are) Answer The bacterium is ...., the bacteria are..... Bacteria is the plural form, bacterium is the singluar.
Bacterium. The plural form -a comes from Latin, where a 2nd declension neuter noun's singular is -um and its plural is -a. You can see the same from datum, data;
biologically yes, grammatically no. Bacterium is the singular form of bacteria.
Yes. Bacterium is the (not very often used) singular form of "bacteria."
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
The bacterium that always maintains the same shape is called a monomorphic bacterium. This means it exists in a single shape form, as opposed to pleomorphic bacteria which can change shape.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria. The plural possessive is bacteria's.(e.g. The bacteria's differing metabolisms make some more susceptible to the drugs.)
You may have heard of "bacteria" already. In the general population, people refer to "bacteria" as meaning"one bacteria" or "many bacteria". However, this is incorrect. In microbiology, the term "bacteria" means many, while the term "bacterium" refers to a single bacterium. Simply; 1=bacterium while 2 or more= bacteria